Just as a matter of interest, I would have to wonder what effect the below has had on Nala
APT isn’t just a command-line utility; it’s a robust ecosystem of tools (like Synaptic, GDebi, and apturl) and libraries (such as aptdaemon and packagekit) that support Mint’s applications. Many of these tools, though functional, were built over a decade ago and are no longer maintained upstream. While Linux Mint, Ubuntu, and Debian have patched them over the years, their aging design and limited features created persistent issues and barriers to innovation.
To address this, Linux Mint transitioned to
Aptkit and
Captain:
- Aptkit replaces aptdaemon, providing a streamlined library for package management operations with updated functionality.
- Captain unifies the features of GDebi and apturl into a single, easy-to-use utility.
All the tools previously reliant on aptdaemon, synaptic or apturl now use these replacements.
from :
https://www.linuxmint.com/rel_xia_whatsnew.php
below is a screenshot of a full page of my History of Updates
View attachment 23835
and the next page:
View attachment 23836
.....which eventually gets up back to the 25th January
I would certainly agree there has been a largeish hoard of upgrades just waiting in the wings.....But....22.1 has performed brilliantly regardless of upgrades being held back.
I can only assume that Clem has been thoroughly aware of what needs to updated/upgraded and
the order in which this must happen so as not to collapse the whole show.
Methinks he has done extraordinarily well.
I was thinking earlier todat that the way LM22.1 is performing, I will fell quite confident in blowing away LM21.3 either tomorrow or the day following. 22.1 is
that good.
I believe this has shown a sensible approach, Clem and co do not do 'partial release' as a test......the 'material' is thoroughly tested before it gets anywhere near the mirrors for release.
In addition to all these updates, a new kernel was released today (australian time)...among the fixes aimed at were the drivers for a small number of monitors which were not "lighting up" under the original kernel. A Samsung here, (one of many) was one of them. So in addition to keeping the ship steady, they have also fixed any minor oops moment.