I think that one reason people are getting confused is that they are not aware of what "stable" means.
An "unstable" version might be as stable and bug-free as a "stable" version, however the "unstable" version is a moving target and will most likely change in short time. Stable means: No more features added, no functional changes, bugs will be fixed. Unstable means: New feature may come without notice, features may break, one thing can suddenly work completely different than before, bugs will sooner or later be fixed, but you might have to back to an earlier version for a while. But these changes will only come with upgrades. If you are running an unstable version and it works, stick to it. It probably has more features and is more up to date than the stable version. Keep away from upgrades unless you have time to test them out. Stable is what you run when stability is more important than features. If you can't wait for a week or two for a bug to get fixed or back to an earlier version to avoid an introduced bug. /Peter
