I was wondering.. should I be sticking with Potato or switch to Woody? Currently, my setup is I am running a Gateway. A router so my Windows computers can share an internet connection. I installed Potato 2.2r5, but I wanted iptables so I performed the Bunk hack to upgrade to Kernel version 2.4.17. This worked good so far.
But now I'm finding that I want to get updated versions of other things that aren't available in Stable (or the Stable version is old). Most of these, I just surf to the Unstable Packages page of the Debian website and download the .deb file, then dpkg --install it. But is there a way for me to use apt-get to install these newer packages, without fully upgrading to Woody? OR, alternately, should I just bite the bullet and upgrade to Woody since it's due to be released in May? If I upgrade to Woody, how do I do it? Would I just edit /etc/apt/sources.list, replace all "stable" with "woody", then apt-get update; apt-get upgrade ? A friend of mine, who knows way more about Debian and Linux than I do, told me that when she upgraded to Woody some time ago, there were many security holes in her system. Do I need to worry about this still? -- - Alan Poulton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) - >From the Phrases You'd Like To Say At Work file: It sounds like English, but I can't understand a word you're saying. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]