Is anyone else finding the naming of kubuntu repos confusing? In the update section of kpackagemanager I see 'Important security updates' and 'Reccomended updates' which iirc were enabled by default. Then there are 'Proposed updates' and 'Unsupported updates'. On the help page here https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/Kubuntu that the kubuntu release info links to, 'proposed updates' is called 'Pre-released updates' and according to that page 'Unsupported updates' is actually the 'backports' repo.
Then the ppa repos add more confusion with a backports ppa for example.
Firstly I think kpackagemanager should call the backports repo backports rather than 'unsupported updates'. Secondly if there are backports repo and 'proposed updates' are unstable testing packages why are releases like kde4.4 released through ppas?
I know ubuntu has restrictions on releasing updates into the main repos between releases but thought that backports was to facilitate that and that proposed was for unstable packages still in testing. Couldn't kde4.4 have been put into 'proposed' and then into the main backports repo when found to be stable?
I am obviously not in the developer 'loop' so there may be very good reasons for the way it is done that I don't know of but as a user I am finding it is becoming difficult to understand.
Then the ppa repos add more confusion with a backports ppa for example.
Firstly I think kpackagemanager should call the backports repo backports rather than 'unsupported updates'. Secondly if there are backports repo and 'proposed updates' are unstable testing packages why are releases like kde4.4 released through ppas?
I know ubuntu has restrictions on releasing updates into the main repos between releases but thought that backports was to facilitate that and that proposed was for unstable packages still in testing. Couldn't kde4.4 have been put into 'proposed' and then into the main backports repo when found to be stable?
I am obviously not in the developer 'loop' so there may be very good reasons for the way it is done that I don't know of but as a user I am finding it is becoming difficult to understand.
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