> will we find "pup" here ? > http://linux.duke.edu/projects/ no, pup is a project paul nasrat(primarily) is working on at red hat. > - edit existing yum.repos.d files > - add new repos, evtl. by clicking on > http://somwhere.org/repository/addthisyumrepo.file > - overview|enable|disable repos > > - sort packages|groups by: installdate, install-source, name, size, ... > - whichcd [RFE] - /usr/share/comps-extras/whichcd.py pckg1 pkg2 group1 > group2 > > - show package|group dependencies > (is it possible to access the rpm database via odbc ?) > > - sources (evtl. createrepo): > cd (distri-cds, additional-cds), iso-file, ftp, http, webdav, nfs, ... > > - different themes okay so let's think about this. Paul is writing an updater. It let's you select packages to update and it presents you the information in a non-threatening manner. All of the features you mention above are extremely threatening to the new user. Why on earth would we clutter up an interface with something like themes for an updater? -sv