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X Strike Force X.Org X11 SVN commit: r96 - trunk/debian



Author: dnusinow
Date: 2005-05-16 19:53:00 -0500 (Mon, 16 May 2005)
New Revision: 96

Modified:
   trunk/debian/changelog
   trunk/debian/control
Log:
Change control file's ubuntu branding to Debian

Modified: trunk/debian/changelog
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/changelog	2005-05-17 00:46:32 UTC (rev 95)
+++ trunk/debian/changelog	2005-05-17 00:53:00 UTC (rev 96)
@@ -4,6 +4,7 @@
 
     - Updated packaging to be based off Ubuntu warty packaging
       - Merge changelog from Ubuntu warty package to this changelog
+      - Change instances of "Ubuntu" to "Debian" in control file
 
     - Re-add jisx0208.1983-0.enc.gz to MANIFEST.all's list of font encodings
       until I know more about why it was removed.

Modified: trunk/debian/control
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/control	2005-05-17 00:46:32 UTC (rev 95)
+++ trunk/debian/control	2005-05-17 00:53:00 UTC (rev 96)
@@ -2153,7 +2153,7 @@
 Architecture: all
 Depends: xorg-common
 Description: X Window System (X.Org) infrastructure metapackage
- This package smooths upgrades from Ubuntu 4.10 Warty Warthog by depending on
+ This package smooths upgrades from Debian 3.1 by depending on
  xorg-common.
  .
  After the upgrade to X.Org, you can safely remove this package.
@@ -2186,9 +2186,9 @@
  Version 11", "X11", "X11R6", and "X11R6.8".  The version of X used in Debian
  is derived from the version released by the X.Org Foundation, and is thus
  often also referred to as "X.Org".  All of the preceding quoted terms are
- functionally interchangeable in an Ubuntu system.
+ functionally interchangeable in an Debian system.
  .
- Until recently, Ubuntu shipped an X implementation released by The XFree86
+ Until recently, Debian shipped an X implementation released by The XFree86
  Project, Inc. (aka "XFree86").  The X.Org implementation is derived from the
  XFree86 implementation previously shipped, and is generally considered to be
  the standard implementation by vendors and distributors.



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