On 08/01/2012 11:06 PM, Gary Dale wrote:
And how promptly do the Debian-Multimedia developers resolve these conflicts? Is this a big issue or just an occasional minor hiccup?On 01/08/12 11:52 PM, Yaro Kasear wrote:It's not failures so much as conflicts. Certain Debian packages will not upgrade because the requisite libraries have been replaced by Debian-multimedia ones.On 08/01/2012 02:55 PM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:On Mi, 01 aug 12, 22:30:52, Teemu Likonen wrote:Titanus Eramius [2012-08-01 21:18:03 +0200] wrote:My 2 cents on this is, that once packages is installed from DebianMultimedia it's very hard to go back to stable. But if one keeps usingDebian Multimedia there are rarely any problems.Now I got curious because that sound so general. What makes it veryhard? In my experience installing and removing packages has always beeneasy in Debian.The versioning scheme of Deb Multimedia packages is meant to take priority over the Debian proper packages, but this can create problems under certain circumstances. Kind regards, AndreiI haven't been using Debian as long as many on this list. Are failures with Debian-Multimedia that overtly common or are they rather circumstantial?It's a shame because there are some very nice tools in Debian-multimedia that I'd love to be able to use but not at the expense of core Debian packages.