I have followed on this topic on this list and on other places and I may 
say I am very concernd over the issue. I believe Craig has summed up the 
current situation well. 

A couple of further points, one of the biggest complaints over the 
development of systemd is the attitude of the main developers, ie them 
taking little notice of anyone else.
The second point is the apparent helter-skelter expansion of facilties in a 
single system component. The more complex a single item of software becomes 
the far more difficult it becomes to maintain it bug free. The future of 
linux with systemd does not bear thinking about. 

The supporters of systemd do not really make me feel any better, as there 
is little discussion going on. The pro argument apparently being, its good, 
the debian developers like it so there. This sort of pro argument goes no 
where.
What is debian going to do if and when the systemd developers take no 
notice of any changes they propose and this appears likely. 

Website http://boycottsystemd.org/ may be of interest. 

Its very likely I have installed my last up date of Debian. I will carry 
one with the current stable while I assess what alternatives are around.
Looks to be three options so far... 

Gentoo
Slackware 

I have used both of these, the third option in the medium term is to stick 
with Debian 7.x but gradually update system compnents by building them 
myself. Note, I already do this to some extent, usually running a later 
version of the kernel, Xorg and Mesa. This of course does muck up the 
package managment but the does not bother me much. I could of course make 
my own deb packages, this __may__ make it easier in the long run. 

Lindsay 

Linux since kernel 0.96d, who would have predicted it would end this way? 
:-(
_______________________________________________
luv-main mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main

Reply via email to