On Tue, May 03, 2011 at 11:41:35AM +0200, Lucas Nussbaum wrote: [...] > I've always found it strange that, as a volunteer project, we are > creating a product that is mainly used in professional > environments. [...]
I see that as a side effect. The same qualities of stable which lead me to rely on it on for a vast number of servers in an ISP/data center setting also make it an ideal platform for the servers which host and provide services to the whole of the free software community... much the same way that the volunteers who maintain buildds, mirrors and the bulk of Debian's infrastructure are almost certainly also enterprise, service provider or university technology professionals by day. The lessons learned in those environments help demonstrate what technologies do and don't scale. A volunteer sysadmin managing a ton of infrastructure for a large free software project is, given the opportunity, going to choose a platform which requires as little maintenance as possible. This increased efficiency maximizes the impact of his or her contribution to the community. In many cases, this is Debian's stable release. -- { IRL(Jeremy_Stanley); WWW(http://fungi.yuggoth.org/); PGP(43495829); WHOIS(STANL3-ARIN); SMTP(fu...@yuggoth.org); FINGER(fu...@yuggoth.org); MUD(kin...@katarsis.mudpy.org:6669); IRC(fu...@irc.yuggoth.org#ccl); ICQ(114362511); YAHOO(crawlingchaoslabs); AIM(dreadazathoth); } -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110503135944.gc1...@yuggoth.org