Debian Not Looking For Commercial Fortune 45
Geoffery writes "Some analysts foresee a less than rosy future for projects such as Debian, claiming free coding is all well and good, but that without a solid financial backing — such as the models adopted by Red Hat and to a greater degree Novell/Suse — Debian will ultimately hit a brick wall.
ZDNet interviews Steve McIntyre, the new man leading the organization on issues of 'community registrations' and future plans."
Non-profit group does not seek profit (Score:5, Insightful)
They Could Make a Shuttle's Worth of Money (Score:4, Funny)
Heck, with some old sid packaging contibutions, I am a "They".
Don't f*ck with Deb. You'll bring down six or seven other distros downstream.
Really bad summary. Debian is Rocking. (Score:3, Insightful)
The article itself is far more positive than the description. No one but the submitter is questioning Debian's future. The interview asked some pointed questions and was obviously impressed with the answers as the first paragraph or two show.
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This has been fixed.
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That's interesting but the result has been good anyway. Bottlenecks that lock out malice are very good to have. If one person has been good enough for the last 15 years, two should be enough for the next seven.
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Yes, they do! (Score:1)
I think that the problem is in the term "non-profit". In my language, Greek, we use a term which translates like "an organization who's aim is not the profit".
Non-profit organizations do not have profit as a goal. However they do need it as a medium in order to succeed at their higher purpose.
So, Debian needs money. However they will not sacrifice their "social contract" (Gentoo term) in order to maximize income.
What the OSS haters forget (Score:3, Insightful)
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Yeah, I don't know what kind of a "brick wall" Debian is supposed to hit. It's released under the GPL. There are people interested in working on it. Therefore, it will continue to be developed. QED.
debian has a place (Score:1)
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http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/kk288/debian_choosing_distribution.html [cornell.edu] is a place to find some of the Debian based distributions.
Just because Windows is only a single sourced OS, and older versions are deprecated, it does not follow that ALL OS software follows the same crooked path.
How many versions of DOS were there? T
I read through TFA (Score:3, Informative)
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Success is very relative, even subjective. (Score:2)
Congratulations to the Debian team for letting themselves define what success is, not others.
Just because success to the many means building a huge company, profits, power. It absolutely doesn't mean it's the same for everyone. It's hard not to find it fascinating when groups get fixated on this.
For the Debian folks, independence and freedom is success, of that they've done a great job!
last couple years (Score:3, Informative)
Ubuntu et al. will bail them out (Score:2)
OMG Debian's dying!1!! (Score:2)
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Add
use-host-decl-names on;
to dhcpd.conf
I really don't think there's any way else to do this in Ubuntu. If you're doing stuff like that, run Debian. If you don't know you even can do that, run Ubuntu.
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Ubuntu Debian; Symbiotic relationship (Score:1)
What the writer is missing is the symbiotic relationship of Ubuntu and Debian. Debian does many things really really well. Somethings, like frequent releases, not so well. But for those of us who use Debian, that would be a beautiful design on top of the cake and frosting we already have... Without it, that cake tastes pretty darn good.
Ubuntu came along and tackled this problem, so Debian can continue doing what it does best. To top it off, Ubuntu has funding. And they aren't greedy leeches who take De
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AFAIK you can use gentoo without actually compiling everything from source.
Debian not dying. (Score:2)
I don't use Debian on my computer, but it's definitely not dying.
Interviewer keeps trying to get at something. (Score:2, Insightful)
Suffer? 12 years of working with linux, and Debian has consistently been the only distribution I've seen that doesn't really "suffer" from anything at all. In fact, I'd say that the so-called "archetypal non-business-minded engineers" have time and again produced the creme de la creme of distros and done it right. There's no other distribu
Not a problem (Score:2)
Topsy turvy (Score:2)
When you don't depend on a steady stream of income to keep a project running, the only threat to it is loss of interest. And since RedHat and SuSE aren't genuinely free (ie you can't get ISOs from the vendors), I think Debian will have substantial interest for a very long time.