[email protected] wrote: > I would say no, simply as it has not committed anything at this point. I'd > give it a day or two and see if anything has changed. You might also try > changing your repo servers in synaptic. I usually use osuosl repos here in > the valley. They always seem to perform well. > Scott Garman wrote: > I always answer "No" when this happens and re-run the update - the > packages you successfully downloaded will be cached so it won't take as > long the second time. > > Since apt uses dependency checking (and the update notifier app uses apt > in the background), if you tried to continue with the install I assume > it would only update the packages it downloaded that have met > dependencies. So you shouldn't be able to bork your system with either > answer, but to be on the safe side I always say No and run the updates > again. >
Thanks. I shall answer "No" and try again another day. -- Regards, Dick Steffens www.dicksteffens.com _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
