Can we have a ticky for people using Sid, it could have upgrade warnings, tips and tricks, and the experiences of users.
Give your opinions.

If you are a desktop user with some experience in Linux and does not mind facing the odd bug now and then, use unstable. It has all the latest and greatest software, and bugs are usually fixed swiftly.
aaditya_bagga wrote:Because I am a new Sid user and like to know beforehand if a upgrade will break my system or not?
aaditya_bagga wrote:Also, for explaining things like apt-listbugs and reportbug (tips).
aaditya_bagga wrote:http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-faq/ch-choosing.htmlIf you are a desktop user with some experience in Linux and does not mind facing the odd bug now and then, use unstable. It has all the latest and greatest software, and bugs are usually fixed swiftly.
I belong to this category.
"sid" is subject to massive changes and in-place library updates. This can result in a very "unstable" system which contains packages that cannot be installed due to missing libraries, dependencies that cannot be fulfilled etc. Use it at your own risk!
The most important thing is to keep in mind that you are participating in the development of Debian when you are tracking testing or unstable. This means that you should know your way around Linux, Debian and the Debian packaging system and that you should have an interest in tracking down and fixing bugs.
aaditya_bagga wrote:Hi!
Can we have a ticky for people using Sid, it could have upgrade warnings, tips and tricks, and the experiences of users.
Give your opinions.
Upgrade of an Installed System - dist-upgrade - Overview
If the whole system is to be upgraded this is achieved through a dist-upgrade. You should always check Current Warnings on the aptosid main web site, and check the warnings against the packages that your system wants to dist-upgrade. If you need to hold a package refer to Downgrade and Hold a package
An 'upgrade' only of 'debian sid' is not recommended.
Frequency of a dist-upgrade
dist-upgrade as routinely as you can, ideally once every week or two, at least 1 time per month to be safe. ...
ew-linux wrote:I agree that Sid is for people who know what they are doing. But then again, there has to be a first time for everything
AdrianTM wrote:There's no hacker in my grandma...
dilberts_left_nut wrote:ew-linux wrote:I agree that Sid is for people who know what they are doing. But then again, there has to be a first time for everything
I'd qualify that further and say that sid (and testing) are for people who want to know what they are doing (and how it works and why it doesn't).
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