Forum Moderators: bakedjake
Gentoo tends to be more cutting edge, Debian is as conservative as you want to make it.
Apt for redhat is cool, but I'd like to know how current they are going to keep the dependency tree. Will it slip behind as the version of redhat ages?
With Debian and Gentoo you always stay current. The only time you have to reinstall is when you get a new hard drive.
Gentoo had KDE 3 right away. Gnome 2 just got officially into Unstable about a month or so ago.
There are always the unofficial debs, but I think the Debian culture discourages users from using the latest renditions of software.
I don't think either approach is bad, just different philosophies.
I myself stick mostly to testing on desktop/development machines and stable on servers. I only take selected parts from unstable by using apt preferences.
I still haven't switched to gnome2, mostly becuase I need my computers in working order to get my things done, so I have decided to wait until gnome2 enters testing.
That it exactly the thing I like about Debian. With that in mind, I don't really think Debian is for those who want the latest and greatest. It is for people (like me) who want the latest and greatest *if it works* :)
If some package has wrong (like too restrictive) dependencies, you should file a bug report on it.
The Debian dependency system really makes a lot of sense.
Do you know how to use apt preferences? They are important if you want to run stable and install selected parts of testing/unstable.
René