>>On Sunday 03 September 2006 20:17, Hex Star wrote: >out in the back woods Paul Johnson wrote: >> Yikes...is Debian gonna survive?
>Just because one relatively minor (in the sense that he had no >formal >position) Debian developer with a big mouth has a blood pressure >problem >doesn't mean Debian is doomed. >-- >Paul Johnson I have to agree with this statement, some of the statements have some valid ideas. I also think that the slashdot discussion has pretty much aired out this whole thing. I don't think the answer is for one person to decide the course of developement. After all Debian does have elections, and a release manager is in charge of the release. A valid point is the fact that Debian includes more arch's then say Ubuntu, that in itself slows down the development cycle. As far as Debian being in trouble, I doubt that, it's kind of like the Apple is dying rumor. People have been saying that for like the past 10-15 years, and Apple is doing better now then it ever was. Just look at how many packages are in the deb format, just how many distro's use apt-get, and debs anyway. That in itself will keep it alive, then you have the freedom idea, how many distro's can claim to be as free as Debian? I personally have major problems with Ubuntu, for instance the other day I was trying to solve an Alsa problem, and was looking for some files in etc, guess what they were not there. I did a search on google and did not find the reason why they did not use that file, but in Debian they are there and is more constant. The only reason I had to go back to Ubuntu was because of quake4, I had major texture corruption, which was most likely do to the Nvidia binary drivers and some of the placement of some some obscure files. The sad part about it was Nvidia came out with some new drivers that might of solved the problem. Remember if you point the finger at someone else, four fingers are pointing back at you. I think a lot of people need a course in communication, but putting someone like a king in charge is not a good way to solve technical problems. I personally think that the best technical method should be implemented. I hope that with all the bright minds in Debian that it can happen, am I worried about Debian not in the least. Gnu_Raiz -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]