Obviously, then making technical decision one must realize the field we must work in near future. So we need to make at least draft analysis of the current situation.
Strongest aspects of Debian that outperforms every other distro: 1) It's universal operating system. In minimal installation it is stays really small in both disk and memory requirements. 2) It's really fast and effective. 3) It fully controllable by moderate specialist. It does exactly and only what you want and then you want. 4) Debian core is perfect at its stability. Non-core packet is quite stable too. 5) Therefore, it is a best base to build effective, robust and really secure systems on it. 6) It's clearly the best system for small-sized systems such as web-servers: http://w3techs.com/technologies/details/os-linux/all/all 6) I believe Debian and its huge and thoroughly tested packet base is the best starting point for complicated non-standard setups attuned for individual customer needs. 7) It is rather conservative in tools of managing of the system. This helps to teach new things and to move further than study how to do the same things in new system every couple of years. 8) It's best of all distros in freedom of choices how you want things to be done. At least for skilled people. The weaknesses of Debian: 1) Lack of full-time developers of distro itself. We cannot change big things fast. We cannot change things frequently. 2) We don't have much major upstream developers of core Linux components. We cannot influence driving path of Linux itself much. 3) Lack of paid "official" commonly-trusted technical support with close connection with major Debian developers. Customers don't have a telephone number which they can call and all things magically "start to work". What happens in Linux world today: Red Hat is commercial company. They are making money. To make money they must have high prices. To have prices much higher than real cost of service a company must be alone on the market segment. But last years we see trends as Red Hat is have been slowly but continuously squeezed out from the leader in Linux support and distribution. I think it happens due to 2 tendencies: 1) Aggressive marketing of Ubuntu. Many new Linux-people familiar with Ubuntu, but not Red Hat family of distros. 2) Steady growing of number of high-class Linux specialists. It's easy now to find really good professional to build custom system with almost any degree of complexity. And these specialists mostly prefer Debian as it more transparent, simple, flexible and small-component-driven than Red Hat and family. At the same time it's robust and fast at least as Red Hat if not more. That powers have Red Hat to change the situation: 1) They have strong reputation as leader of Open Source. Many years they helped to make Linux to become best operating system ever. 2) They have great influence on many key developers of Linux ecosystem. 3) They have outstanding respectfulness and trust credit from Open Source community. What Red Had can do: 1) They can change Linux kernel developing scheme so that Red Hat kernel will somehow has features that not so fast spread to other distros. In fact they did so in limited form, but Linux kernel already so feature rich that bleeding-edge kernel features not any critical to most of users. 2) They can circumvent the GNU/Linux infrastructure so they can fully control it and any concurrent must be in the wake of Red Had innovations. Automatically, every distro become either Red Had clone in many aspects or become geek-only. - I believe this is that happening now. They developing and hard pushing a product that changes all the way the system works. The product absorbs more and more system services from booting and starting services to even user authorization and logging. Clearly, it makes the system less robust and less secure: http://ewontfix.com/14/ This is really bad for everybody except Red Hat. They have all systemd specialists in the company. If you have RH support - you welcome, all you problems with systemd will be solved fast. If you have non-supported configuration - just pay more. If you have some other distro and even non-standard configuration, you're on your own. I mean all of Debian users. We are always welcome to patch systemd and send patches to a company, that created trouble for us. Yes, probably 95% will never face the problems that somebody already not solved. But I'm talking about specialists that making complicated non-standard systems out of Debian. Even on small and simple web-servers systemd and it additional services will cause growing of memory footprint of the system, kicking Debian out of low-end VPS'es exactly as CentOS now. Yes, providers will offer VPS'es with more memory, but Debian will lose one of its big advantages over Red Had family. At any rate, if systemd continues to absorb system level tasks, diversity between distributives become only cosmetic. But why need other distributives with minor differencies if we already have the leader among them: Red Hat? In such a situation Debian probably will cease to exist. Or it will try to make really different distro almost from scratch. But it will be much harder to make it from scratch instead of trying to not loose control over ecosystem now. I believe, choice systemd as default init system will slowly make Debian one of many and eventually destroy it. Regards, J ______________________________________________________ powered by Secure-Mail.biz - anonymous and secure e-mail accounts. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org