Debian 4.0 'Etch' Released 245
An anonymous reader writes "Earlier today we discussed the possibility that Debian Etch might be released soon. Well, according to debian.org, it has already happened. Etch has been released: 'The Debian Project is pleased to announce the official release of Debian GNU/Linux version 4.0, codenamed etch, after 21 months of constant development. Debian GNU/Linux is a free operating system which supports a total of eleven processor architectures and includes the KDE, GNOME and Xfce desktop environments. It also features cryptographic software and compatibility with the FHS v2.3 and software developed for version 3.1 of the LSB.'"
Yay! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yay! (Score:5, Funny)
*ducks*
Disclaimer: I am not responsible for any loss of employment or productivity by clicking on any link in this post.
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And its not even the 1st... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And its not even the 1st... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And its not even the 1st... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And its not even the 1st... (Score:5, Informative)
(that would have been fun, don't you think so
more important.
Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Informative)
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That's pretty ignorant. Few if any pieces of software have the number of compile time options as the Linux kernel. Even if you module-ize everything you possibly can, there are still many choices you make that you are bound to, such as IO schedulers and pre-empting.
Any serious Linux user is capable of and knows the value of compiling their own kernel.
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Yeah. Except they always seem to end up disabling initrd for some unknown reason ("initrd is hard, man..."
> and knows the value of compiling their own kernel.
Yup. 0, to me, except if I do some forms of kernel hacking.
The statment "Everyone serious compiles their own kernel anyway" is just not true.
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I had used my own kernel fresh from kernel.org for ages, but then I realized it was so much more work than just running the stock kernel - that had all the problems and workarounds documented - in order to be on the bleeding edge (something hard to do with Debian stable, anyway). I just gave up on it. I thought that if there is a package manager, I should use it fully. "linux-ima
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I've had customers give me servers with not supported or improperly supported network devices and raid controllers.
My personal PC has a sound controller that's not supported by anything older than 2.6.19.
It used to be that when I'd do a Linux install I would install my own php, apache, ftpd, mysql etc but over time it's gotten better
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I had one Dell Poweredge 1900 with a SATA RAID controller that was not supported by Debian stable. I simply decided it would be better to install CentOS instead, since it's good enough and the machine was supposed to host a bunch of virtual servers with OpenVZ. The VPSs are all Debian, but I saw it less of a problem to go Red Hat and Yum than it would be to roll our own kernels (and apply security fixes from time to time).
But I agree. With time, I came to rely more
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Ubuntu Feisty: Linux sec2lpt7-linux 2.6.20-14-generic #2 SMP Mon Apr 2 20:37:49 UTC 2007 i686 GNU/Linux
Granted it's a beta release, but I've found that Ubuntu betas are more stable than some distributions' finals.
Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Insightful)
Any serious Linux user is capable of and knows the value of compiling their own kernel.
Which includes knowing when it is not necessary to do so. Unless you have extremely strange hardware, or very esoteric requirements for the system, the packaged kernels are absolutely fine. Building your own gains very little over the packaged kernels in these circumstances, either in performance or convenience; it will probably actually make life more complicated, as you will need to keep your kernel up-to-date manually, rather than just using the newer packaged kernel for your distro.
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Fortunately, with tools like genkernel et al., they don't need to. Who cares if they use the deadline scheduler instead of CFQ? Who cares if they load dozens of modules that end up returning "no such device"? As long as it runs, and it brings new adopte
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Any serious Linux user is capable of and knows the value of compiling their own kernel.
Particularly on Debian, since it makes it so easy.
The result is an installable .deb package. To make the configuration process quicker, copy your current kernel config from /boot so you can just tweak the items you want to change, rather than starting from scratch. Note that you only need to install kernel-package
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Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Insightful)
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You try out a new tool, you do the Dumbest Thing That Could Possibly Work, because you don't know any better.
You gather some experience, and you try out all of the gizmo features, to strut your stuff.
Once the 'new' wears off the gizmo features, you relax, and go back to the DTTCPW, because you're bored of the gizmos.
What's the difference?
When things go wrong, you know which of those gizmo features to trot out and fix the problem.
It's all about negotiati
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> When you gain experience, you start to compile your own.
so far, so good. reasonably accurate.
> When you become a professional sysadmin, you use the stock kernels, because they are easily available and work.
no, that's when you've become a lazy slob. don't project your faults onto others.
real professional sysadmins compile a custom kernel that is perfectly suited to the particular server, with exactly
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Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:4, Insightful)
If you're supporting a few hundred servers then any differences between the systems need to be kept to a minimum.
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That is so true. It drives me nuts when a system is "special" and I have to go back and compile a custom kernel for it. I've been trying to standardize back to stock kernels for quite a while now. Definitely less headache when possible. The more
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-matthew
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Shoddy rushed release (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously though, this is a rather surprising bug to slip through.
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Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Interesting)
as a debian stable user, there's a reasonable expectation that, after 21 months in development, they don't ship a kernel with experimental feature that is known to be broken?
I don't mean this is an experimental feature that breaks sometimes. This feature is just clearly documented to be broken. As in it doesn't work.
I only found out about the stuff that I posted because I updated this morning and all hell broke loose.
I know I should have tested it on a test machine before bringing it into production. (or maybe waited a bit) But this is a small machine in an informal setting. I don't have a test machine. But I do have 20+ users with slow internet. and it's really not asking for too much to expect a thing so blatant.
Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:4, Informative)
debian testing release is one of the most popular distribution in its own right.
this isn't exactly some hacked up job released after big push to meet deadline. this went through months of release engineering and countless beta-testers.
debian stable release (the snapshot of etch as of today) do not get updates or bugfixes. etch 4.0 will not see any updates to gnome or kernel or gaim or anything. debian stable only gets security bugfixes. (if the bug is just a bug without security implications, it does not get fixed.)
don't you think this puts on an extra burden of not enabling (once again, known to be nonfunctional) experimental kernel option?
yes, testing before live production is good practice. yes, patience before upgrading is a virtue. but only because debian fucks up sometimes. if debian doesn't fuck up ever, patience is not a virtue. and i'm saying that debian fucked up.
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If you think the debian release team owes you a favor, good luck.
p.s. debian stable can get fixes outside of security, but only for high priority bugs dealing with data loss and the like.
p.p.s. you speak of "experimen
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Do you not understand? Exhaustive testing is done by YOU! and me, and the original poster who seems to have accomplished the epitome of bad administration. It's our job to try and break the betas, alphas and RCs. It's our fault if the final release doesn't work with our exotic set
Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Multipath broken in debian etch! (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason why it slipped through the release engineering for the new stable release is quite simply because no one reported it as a bug.
If someone had reported it, it would have been dealt with and otherwise resolved. Indeed, it may still be resolved in a point release, but it definetly won't be unless you (or someone like you) who experiences the bug files a bug in the bug tracking system (using reportbug or your MUA). Since (as of a few days ago) no one has filed such a bug related in anyway to MULTIPATH_CACHED, it has not been fixed.
Considering the sheer number of people who (supposedly) use testing, none of whom apparently found the bug and/or bothered to report it, it was just not a popular feature to have been tested properly. Like it or not, a critical part of Debian's QA are the users who are using the testing and unstable distributions and reporting bugs. If they don't find it, no one will. (In case you haven't figured it out yet, there's nothing magical about being a Debian Developer in this regard; we're users too, and do the same type of testing.)
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Those are and should be dealt with upstream. If the package maintainer is also one of the original software maintainers, then he/she should be more concerned with those bug reports.
That said, it pays to know about the bugs in the software you package. While the package maintainer is not necessarily a maintainer of the original tree, he/she should be aware of the bugs he/she packages so workarounds (or patches) can
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read the linux kernel mailing list. read what others are saying about this option. it's been in the kernel for 4+ years without any maintenance. it's broken and everyone knows it. the guys are like, "yeah it's broken and it's fucking up multipath. we'll get rid of it in 2.6.23 for sure"
there's no reason why debian kernel builders should have made the conscious decision to _enable_ equal cost multipath caching. it gains you absolutel
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This release begs the question... (Score:3, Interesting)
Will I be able to have Debian perfectly handle [all] my basic multimedia requirements well by default? I would like to play Yahoo, CNN, ABC, BBC andd FOX video and audio by default. Let a slashdotter inform a soul.
Re:This release begs the question... (Score:5, Informative)
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Might take some searching: (Score:4, Informative)
In addition to Flash (patent issues) and the Win32 codecs (patents), you'll also need libdvdcss2 (DMCA) if you want to play DVDs, and you might as well get LAME if it's not in there by default (god knows -- probably patents).
Putting
deb http://www.debian-multimedia.org/ [debian-multimedia.org] stable main
into your sources.list ought to work, but I'm not sure how actively that repo is maintained (it still lists sarge as the stable tree). The VideoLAN people likewise just have instructions for Sarge but hopefully that'll change soon.
Re:Might take some searching: (Score:5, Informative)
Redistributing the Flash player is less a patent problem than side effects of a restrictive licence [adobe.com]. For example, openSUSE goes out of its way to install browsers compatible with its bundled Flash player; Novell apparently has a deal with Adobe to allow redistribution of acroread and flash-player. Debian seems to circumvent this problem by having the package installer download Flash straight from Adobe. Nice and legal either way (assuming Adobe isn't violating a patent somewhere or something like that, which I doubt).
libdvdcss2 is trickier. Using Finland as an example of an EU country (applicable law [finlex.fi]), the situation seems to be that you are allowed to circumvent CSS to watch a movie, but I'm not lawyer enough to tell whether CSS qualifies for legal protection (that depends on whether it's an effective copy protection mechanism, I think) and whether the law requiring the copyright holder/distributor to provide a circumvention device, if necessary, is applicable. You'd also be very hard pushed to argue substantial non-circumventing use, making redistribution quite risky. In conclusion, I think libdvdcss2 users in Finland are safe, but redistributors may have a harder time. Other EU countries should be similar, as most of this legislation originates with the EU.
The win32 binary codecs are, in part at least, straightforward copyright infringment (unlicensed derivative works), but haven't been subject to any legal action I've heard of. Some of the codecs developed from scratch (e.g. some MPEG variants) seem to need patent licences in some areas; this is the primary cause of problems with MP3 (openSUSE circumvents this by using Real's Helix engine for MP3 decoding, which is licensed).
In conclusion, the situation is a mess and if you want to be safe, stick to what the major corps tell you is OK. If it isn't, they take the heat.
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This may help: http://medibuntu.sos-sts.com/ [sos-sts.com]
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<pedant>No, begging the question is assuming the answer. It justs asks the question.</pedant>
Anyway debian provides a wonderful, stable server distro with the best free software out there. If you want stuff like proprietary audio and video codecs, you can probably get or compile them, but it's not the primary goal of debian. You might be better off with something else.
Re:This release begs the question... (Score:5, Informative)
The only thing I'm happy about is that most of these sites are migrating to using streaming video using a Flash-based player like YouTube does so they just use normal HTTP for the transfer mechanism and are simple to get working through a firewall. In the bad old days I had to worry about shit like RealVideo proxies, Quicktime, RTSP, PNA, Windows MMS, etc. While they're probably more efficient, they require your firewall to have a specialized application proxy and it's just an extra pain in the ass if they break the protocol in a new version. The sites that aren't using a Flash player are just streaming Quicktime/Windows Media over HTTP as well so it has the same effect. The main pain-in-the-ass site I experience is with CNN and FoxNews.
Re:This release begs the question... (Score:4, Funny)
In particular, the English language is defined by common use, not by some hypothetical Academie Anglaise, and certainly not by Slashdotters.
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Not only that, but "beg" means exactly what the original poster meant it to mean, it's only that someone else came along and said "if you use it like this, then you actually mean something that has nothing at all to do with asking for something".
Too late? (Score:3, Informative)
Debian has turned into a political zoo of OSS dinosaurs, who are too big and too ancient. They spend lots of time arguing over political issues and raise barrier too high for hew developers.
During Debian Project Leader (DPL) election campaign candidates were almost in unison looking up to Ubuntu as an example on how to attract new users and developers. With Etch out and new DPL in Debian's goal can be summarized in one phrase: "Let's catch up with Ubuntu"
How Debian's brand new DPL wants to do this [debian.org]:
Why compete? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Too late? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Too late? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, ''testing'' is usually reasonably current. If not, you can roll your own package or lock the package and install your own stuff over it. A bit of a pain, but that way I had X11 support for my 7600GT well before Debian had it.
I will likely be going to the next ''testing'' in a month or so.
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Actually, ''testing'' is usually reasonably current. If not, you can roll your own package or lock the package and install your own stuff over it. A bit of a pain, but that way I had X11 support for my 7600GT well before Debian had it.
And ''unstable'' is even more current than testing, and not unstable in the common sense of the word. The biggest annoyance I have with unstable is that my periodic upgrades are bigger than with testing, but I have a fast network connection, so I don't care that much. I've been using unstable as my primary work/play platform for about four years now, and the only time it's given me trouble was during a bit of XFree86 upgrade weirdness that lasted about a day.
Even better, if you're using unstable, it's
Instant Success! (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Give users an option to use commercial drivers right off. The new Ubuntu is doing this, but the implementation is still a little rough around the edges, and it's not at all clear that commercial drivers are frequently better than the FOSS ones, which is certainly true for GPU issues.
2. Default to Iceweasel and Icebird. Debian does this already, so they are a
Re:Instant Success! (Score:4, Insightful)
[Debian] could instantly surpass Ubuntu by pretty much adding all the stuff Ubuntu does (it's all FOSS anyway, right?),
It is not. Many of Ubuntu's changes involve installing non-free software by default. Debian will never do this. You may feel that this will consign the distribution to obscurity until the end of time; go right ahead, it won't change anything, because Debian is about freedom (and technical superiority) and not market share.
but making these small changes:
1. Give users an option to use commercial drivers right off. The new Ubuntu is doing this, but the implementation is still a little rough around the edges, and it's not at all clear that commercial drivers are frequently better than the FOSS ones, which is certainly true for GPU issues.
What is a commercial driver? There are plenty of commercial drivers that are already in Debian main. It is only non-free drivers that are relegated to the, um, non-free section; they will never be installed by default, because to do so would be to go against everything that the Debian project stands for [debian.org].
2. Default to Iceweasel and Icebird. Debian does this already, so they are a leg up. True FOSS is true FOSS, right? And for some dumb reason Ubuntu still defaults to Evolution.
In fact the default apps are Epiphany/Evolution if you use GNOME and Konqueror/Kmail if you use KDE. As it should be--these apps are designed to work as a part of their respective desktop environments, rather than in spite of them, like Firefox/Thunderbird.
3. Make it even easier to turn on compiz/beryl. Still pretty hard even in feisty, requires xorg.conf editing and such... Lame.
As for the software, compiz is packaged for Debian, like any other piece of software. Beryl is not because of the upstream developers' rather... cavaliere attitude towards licensing an copyright. It's a sucky situation, but without a radical overhaul of the US legal system this is not going to change. More details at http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=3 88701 [debian.org].
As for editing xorg.conf... once composite is readt to be enabled by default, it will be enabled by default and every distribution will be able to use it by default. This will be up to the xorg developers themselves, since it is they who are in the best position to make this decision. Until then, Debian should not make invasive changes such as enabling optional and experimental features of core system software such as xorg.
4. Make the default menu look more like windows. You know: "Start" menu, Quicklaunch, App running display (with preview), System Tray, Clock/Calender. Eliminate the top bar that gnome defaults to.
Maybe they should just install XPDE by default? Or just give up and tell people to install Windows in the first place?
This annoys me a great deal actually. Every distro apart from Debian seems to think that it is necessary to change the default layout of their desktop environments so much that they become unrecognisable to inexperienced users. This makes it impossible to write distribution-neutral instructions on how to do anything in GNOME, KDE, etc. Grr!
6. Include some really good foss games. You know, games with 3d sound and video, and online multiplayer. Urban Terror is free (as in beer). Use that one, till a better full FOSS alternative comes along. Hell ioquake3 with the original quake 3 demo files would be better than what most distros ship with.
The games you mention are non-free. As I said above, if you want them installed by default then you are using the wrong distro. Try Ubuntu instead.
8. Make it REALLY EASY to get EVERY CODEC.
It is already very easy to obtain every codec that Debian is able to distribute. They are probably even ins
That's sad, really. (Score:2, Insightful)
See, Debian not only welcomes child distributions, it thrives on them.
http://www.debian.org/misc/children-distros [debian.org]
At some point in time, I would encourage consideration of Debian's slogan, "The Universal Operating System".
Debian has been and always will be
So, which version of Ubuntu is this? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So, which version of Ubuntu is this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Next testing is "Lenny" (Score:5, Informative)
Debian's next testing version will be code named "Lenny" (from the movie Toy Story).
http://times.debian.net/1034-Release-update:-Etch
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when will Lenny be out?
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Should I upgrade my new server? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Should I upgrade my new server? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, read the release notes [debian.org] for the answers to those questions. (and much much more! act today!)
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Missing package (Score:5, Funny)
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1: "...the Debian Security Team may come to a point where supporting Mozilla products is no longer feasible and announce the end of security support for Mozilla products."
2: "register_globals
lol?
It takes a skilled, yet very short bussed person to have any thing to do with such garbage.
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You do know that Mozilla does not support old releases (this includes security fixes)? Debian has two choices: backport security fixes themselves or stop support (for that version) entirely.
What the hell is so funny in these quotes? I don't get it...
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The *only* serious distro (Score:5, Funny)
Let's see:
- There's Gentoo for the script kiddie/ricer set
- RedHat for the clueless corporate types who're lost if they can't use a purchase order to obtain it
- Fedora for the lost souls who haven't yet figured out that it's never going to recover from RedHat's abandonment
- Suse is a German distro owned by Novell -- see RedHat
- Ubuntu is an ancient African word, meaning "I can't configure Debian" (as someone's sig once said)
- Lots of other small distros with funny names that won't be around in two years time
OK, Slackware is great for hobbyists, I'll give you that.So anwyay, which are the distros we're supposed to be taking seriously? Besides Debian?
Interesting, Funny, Flamebait, Troll (Score:2)
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For years now it's been practially deprecated in PHP code and it's already disabled in many other default installations, it's only good (and regular procedure) that Debian followed suit.
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Why would someone open a new tab and NOT go somewhere with that new tab? It's this kind of stupid shit that will eventually drive me away from gnome.
Is it 1997 or 2007 ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is it 1997 or 2007 ? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Is it 1997 or 2007 ? (Score:5, Interesting)
So expect to see some improvements to this stuff in the next year or so. A lot of work is happening at X.org to improve autoconfiguration, and Debian is moving to help develop it and deliver it to the users. Lenny is going to be really exciting from this point of view.
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Upgrade (Score:4, Informative)
- squid may break if you use it for transparent proxying. It wants the "transparent" option after the listern directive(s) now to enable transproxying, but never used to.
- the xlibs upgrade does not go well if it can't remove everything in certain directories. In particular, having the jedit package installed screws this up badly. I had to do some manual fixing to get this working.
- Make really, really sure you have enough room in
- You'll probably want to use the maintainer's CUPS config, then re-configure it to your specs. The CUPS config has changed a lot and is not really compatible.
- cyrus delivery socket permissions may need resetting if you use cyrus & postfix.
Overall, though, for a system as complex as my servers, the process was largely fuss free.
I thought Debian was dead (Score:2)
Why use this over ubuntu? (Score:2)
I was wondering if any fans could give me any reasons why to run this over say any of the ubuntu clan?
Or is it simply the case that debian + polish = ubuntu?
Again, I'm asking actually hoping that someone will pull a Torvalds and say something like "it doesn't presume its users are idiots", which would actually tweak my interest.
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Ubuntu - Makes most of the initial choices for the user..
Debian - manual configuration of a lot of items..
Ubuntu - a bit better at auto-configuration of hardware.
Debian - Etch 20,400+ Packages in the official repository
Ubuntu - Fiesty I think it's around 6000 Packages but can't find a stat anywhere to confirm exact munber.
Debian 13 hardware Architectures i386, x86-64, PowerPC, 68k, SPARC, DEC Alpha, ARM, MIPS
Re:dammit! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Debian - still alive? (Score:5, Insightful)
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IMO, Debian also makes a fine desktop platform, particularly if you run testing or unstable (which is generally more up-to-date than Ubuntu). I prefer Debian over Ubuntu for my desktops.
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Ubuntu users do, every day. Ubuntu is a Debian daughter, and its own success depends on the success of the Debian project.
My outsider's perspective on the Debian/Ubuntu relationship is this: Debian is a very large, very ambitious project. Its main goal is an entirely Free operating system; all other goals seem to be subordinate to that main goal. Ubuntu is interested in a reasonably up-to-date operating system for end-users, and focuses its development on a set of core packages for that purpose. Ev
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Any PowerPC based computer should run Debian fine.