On Fri, Nov 27, 2015 at 10:16 AM Svetlana A. Tkachenko <
[email protected]> wrote:

> But we should not officially recommend users to do so. Right?
>

I'm not sure I'm following.

Being supportive of the ability to run on some hardware constitutes
actively recommending the hardware?

And, assuming the argument against Raspbian is the same as the argument
against Debian, making use of a base OS that happens to include some,
explicitly marked as non-free, components constitutes recommending the use
of non-free components?

While I would very much like to avoid depending on non-free software,
binary blobs, etc, current reality is that GNUstep has a bigger worry:
attractiveness and usefulness. Riccardo's theming work is, for example,
very important here.

I'll re-state my personal position on 'the' 'official' GNUstep 'OS',
because I've discussed it at the meeting and did not mention it on the
mailing list.

- I believe GNUstep needs users. We've discussed on the meeting what the
users are.
- I believe GNUstep needs a certain amount of 'shiny' and 'bling'.
- I believe GNUstep needs to be easy to install.
- I do not believe GNUstep needs an official OS.
- I believe GNUstep needs a reference environment.
- I believe that, for sake of ease of producing the live CD, and for sake
of ease of installation, the reference environment should be initially
based around Ubuntu or one of its derivatives.
  - ...this implies having a process to easily build up-to-date Debian
packages
  - ...this probably means working build process for .deb packages would
help build GNUstep for Raspbian
- I believe that the distinction between an official OS and a reference
OS/environment is:
  - official OS implies extra support is given to a certain backing
distribution (e.g. Ubuntu, FreeBSD)
  - official OS implies backward compatibility and direct upgradeability
  - official OS implies some sort of support by the core team for the
software distribution, as shipped
  - reference environment implies a *suggested* deployment of GNUstep
  - reference environment only presents the *vision* of the core team (or a
subset of the core team)
  - reference environment showcases what is possible with GNUstep

I don't think basing reference environment on one of Raspbian, Debian,
Ubuntu, Fedora, MINT, FreeBSD, or any other OS, implies recommendation of
that OS.

Does that makes sense?
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