A grave bug has been introduced into the "wine" package of Debian Jessie, just days before the November 5th freeze deadline. The /usr/bin/wine launch script fails with an "error: unable to find wine executable. this shouldn't happen." message.
Debian has already suffered much unrest lately over the inclusion of systemd, with threats of a fork being issued, along with the possible cancellation of the GNU/kFreeBSD port and the possible dropping of support for the SPARC architecture. After so much strife and disruption, can Debian afford to have such a serious bug affect such a critical package so soon before such a major freeze?
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Sunday October 26 2014, @07:26PM
I don't need it as a root partition, but I do need to be able to both read and write to it. AFTER I've successfully migrated, THEN I'll consider going totally to a non-Linux partition. Too many times what some people praise isn't what I need, so the conversion needs to be in stages.
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.