Debian Not Looking For Commercial Fortune
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."
News at 11.
As long as there are people who are looking for a challenge and want to write code for the fun of it, there will always be open source software.
Life would be easier if I had the source code.
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.
So the big problem is too much participation? OMG, they are doomed! The bottom line is that Debian is community generated, excellent and growing. The interviewer presented this well, let's not spin it into something it's not.
"Will Debian always suffer from existing at the hobbyist programmer level and its inherent proximity to the archetypal non-business-minded software engineer mentality?"
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 distribution other than maybe Slack that I'm more comfortable with putting into production and knowing it will run day in, day out until the plug is finally pulled.
FUD
Besides - what's Shuttleworth going to run his stuff on if Deb goes down the tubes? Fedora? LOL
Just disrupt the deflector shield with a tachyon burst.