Looks pretty cool. I followed the link to the slashdot article which said: "I installed the binaries , edited the /etc/apt/sources.list (just remove the # from your distribution's mirror), typed "apt-get dist-update," crossed my fingers -- and lo and behold, 48 new packages were installed, 7 were upgraded, and I only had to press "enter" to start the ball rolling!" However, 1 thing stands out in this, what if I don't want 48 new packages installed? but hey, I like the "apt-get install evolution", even if I am not using an email client. Sounds like a great way to get ahead in the world. Or better yet, how do you apply it all humanity? (Get them to run Linux, I guess) On Thursday, December 20, 2001, at 01:01 PM, Richard Bos wrote:
Have a look at http://apt4rpm.sf.net it's doing what you want, and even better once you installed it :) I had e.g. had no problems installing evolution, like all the other folks on the list and the only thing I did was: apt-get update; apt-get install evolution....
Op donderdag 20 december 2001 02:04, schreef je:
To change the topic a bit, is there a way to automate updates with yast1? I don't have X running on my system as it is a server, not a client machine.
-- Richard Bos For those without home the journey is endless