| It just depends, I took the risk once to do a full version upgrade, and it worked out quite pleasantly on my server. However, when I tried the same on my desktop--slightly newer hardware, slightly more media-oriented--it didn't work out well.
It's funny though, because, I spend most of the time and effort in configuration on my server, but I'm more trusting of the upgrade process for a simple terminal/server environment than I am for one on a desktop machine, given that I'm using relatively new software, and the support for drivers and modules on *buntu is a bit fickle. Even though a lot of time and effort was put into configuring the server the way it is, I have backups of all that; what's harder to backup is the capability of the OS to utilize your hardware. From the last system upgrade on my desktop from 7.10 to 8.04, the modules and binary drivers for my nvidia hardware sketched out. In terms of video, the restricted modules in the repositories wouldn't work, and as far as my nvidia sound card goes, not even compiling from source solved it.
Given the chance, I would revert back to 7.04, because I really wanted to preserve the way I used the system on my desktop. I use two xscreens, and two video cards, and I've gotten very use to that. If I were to upgrade, and I could not get my two xscreen setup to work, I would be forced to clean install.
I think that I'm probably going to do that to revert back to 7.04 anyway.
As far as software updates go, I typically always do those. |