>From: andre999 <and...@laposte.net>
>
[...]
>
>In my mind you make an excellent case for upgrading this application from 
>upstream, and installing 
>under /opt, as you say you do already.
>Which I do for Mozilla Seamonkey, for example, because of relatively frequent 
>updates.  (In that 
>case I also apply some personal patches, but that is another question.)
>It is appropriate to report bugs for the application upstream.  The fixes will 
>trickle down to Mageia.
>Just because you use Mageia (or any other distro) doesn't mean you can't 
>install 3rd party 
>applications.  Although certainly it is preferable that most are packaged in 
>Mageia.
>
>Which brings up another point.  Considering your concern for the application, 
>maybe you would like 
>to package it for Mageia.  You could ensure that it is always up to date, and 
>that it works 
>properly, and is properly supported.  (The packager is a key player in 
>support.)
>Just because it is called a backport doesn't mean that it won't work.
>The packager mentoring program will help you get started :)
>
>-- 
>André


Well, first of all, I never liked the _concept_ of backports. Too many 
repositories, too complex tree already. One of the reasons I wasn't very fond 
of Mandriva (the other reason being the IaOra theme(s).)

From the NON-rolling distros, Fedora is arguably the only one who tries to 
bring newer versions of a number of applications throughout its 12+1 months 
lifecycle. w/o using backports. My opinion is that, as long as system libraries 
are _not_ upgraded, many other packages (applications!) should be updated as 
appropriate. Otherwise, the result would be that Windows users would have more 
freedom and ease in decided what version of the [multi-platform open-source] 
applications to use than Linux users! (Except, of course, the users of 
rolling-release distros, and except for users of 
unstable/rawhide/cooker/cauldron...)

I know, I should probably be using Fedora as long as _some_ of their principles 
suit my views much more than Mageia does or than Mandriva did. However, Fedora 
lacks something like Mandriva Control Center, and yum is millions of times 
slower than urpmi, therefore...

Not to mention that most of the best people Mandriva had are now with Mageia, 
which makes this distro hard to ignore... (Je crois qu'on appelle cela 
zugzwang...)

R-C


R-C

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