Laura Conrad escribe: > What I do instead is I have a script that runs "apt-get update", and > then "apt-get install" for a list of things that I want to keep > up-to-date on. Which does actually include alsa in my case, since I'm > having problems that i hope someone might fix some day. It must be kept in mind that the only reason there should be for running sid should be helping Debian developers and not day to day usage. If wanting to have updated software it looks far more suitable pinning to stable or testing tracking a limited number of packages from unstable. Another chance, the best from a stability point of view, is sticking to stable and backporting packages when a newer version is needed. I've running woody for years with some backports from sarge for important software I wanted to have updated and few things ever broke. Some links below I hope useful: http://backports.org/ http://jaqque.sbih.org/kplug/apt-pinning.html http://www.argon.org/~roderick/apt-pinning.html The best about Debian is that you can have exactly the flavour you want. :) Cordially, Ismael -- Dropping science like when Galileo dropped his orange