> I recommend to use "testing" (currently Bullseye) on an individual
Laptop/Desktop Computer, and leave "stable" for server or cooperate end
user installations. Usually "testing" is very stable concerning reliability
for the every day interactive work and during the frequent upgrades (which
you should frequently apply).
>
> "stable" is so stable, that it already when published is not being
perfectly up to date anymore with the newest software versions available.
But for sure the provided software releases are so long time tested that no
mayor bugs are expected to hit you under usual circumstances.
> Where you cannot risk the work load to maybe having to react on
complaining users, or your running system simply does not need much
modernization because it is doing its job and then better don't touch it
unless a security update would need to be applied, then "stable" is
excellent.
>
> If a user is willing to step by step face the changes of a system
following current software releases, then "testing" is offering this to
you. The all over experience of the users with "testing is, that it rarely
breaks. Actually I never experienced this. It simply runs. It is not long
time tested as "stable" because everything is always in the "testing"
period for the next "stable", but "testing" does not mean "unstable". The
comfort of having modern software releases available instead of feeling
parked for years on unchanged apps is often worth the risk to maybe run
into a bug found in a new release. In my experiences, these bugs then are
usually not mission critical and users can most often afford to wait that
the bug gets solved by a soon delivered next release of the software, which
you can expect to soon also arrive in the "testing" distribution of Debian.
>
> So, Debian "stable" is for mission critical apps and services, therefore
not offering short time only tested, newest software. Debian "testing"
brings the comfort of much more up-to-date software to the screen and is
commonly stable enough for the continuous, interactive desktop usage.
>
>
>
> > Apparently, only the newer versions of KDE Plasma have the performance
> > boost.
>
> I cannot confirm this. KDE Plasma is high performant and low on memory
usage for years already. This was different in the far past. Consider that
the internet does not forget and still shows you complains from the past
although they might not apply to the current situation anymore. Also,
enthusiast of other graphical desktop environments sometimes still publish
such obsolete information, maybe because they years ago became full
satisfied with their desktop of choice and since then did not notice the
changes around anymore and are now no more well informed?
> Having had the urgent need for a more modern but also low footprint
desktop to subtitute Window Maker, I years ago did not consider KDE as my
candidate, because of information from highly ranked links in the web
search engines. I ended up testing Xfce, Openbox and LXDE. And I tested
LXQt, which was still in experimental state that time - and found that the
window manager in use by LXQt could be exchanged for various available
candidates. Noticing that kwin performed excellent in LXQt I wondered why
KDE was reported to be sluggish and heavy on resources, if its component
kwin was performing so excellently in LXQt. I gave KDE Plasma a try and
found to have been blinded by obsolete reports still popping up high ranked
in the web search engines. KDE Plasma was that time already a very nice
choice for old machines, and nowadays it continuous to do so. KDE Plasma
resource requirements compete very well with other "small footprint"
desktop environments. In the end you might ask why I then decided for KDE
over LXQt with kwin. Well it is because I much like the administration of
keyboard shortcuts in KDE Plasma, and I much like Kate and Konsole, and
also Dolphin and Krunner are very competitive, and baloo is quite helpful
once the initial indexing is achieved. All this comes with KDE Plasma kind
of out of the box - and perfectly competitive where only small hardware
resources are available.
>
> Best wishes, Marco.
>

Very impressive that you can even compare KDE Plasma to LXQt.

I don't think there is a Debian DVD iso I can use to install Debian
Bullseye.
I think I'll have to install Buster and then switch to Bullseye.
Is there a better option?

Thank you and thanks everyone for all your help.

Reply via email to