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Why Debian Matters More Than Ever

Julie188 writes "If you look at the feature list for Debian 6, released on February 6, it's easy to be underwhelmed. This is especially true when measuring Debian against its offspring, like Ubuntu. Debian doesn't get much credit, and its become trendy for industry pundits to claim it's become irrelevant. But it's more relevant than ever. If you're using Ubuntu (or Linux Mint, or Mepis...), you're really using Debian with some enhancements. According to a presentation given recently by Debian Project Leader (DPL) Stefano Zacchiroli, only 7% of Ubuntu is directly derived from upstream projects, Canonical's projects, or other non-Debian sources. Of the rest, 74% of Ubuntu is rebuilt Debian packages, and 18% are patched and rebuilt Debian packages."

18 of 345 comments (clear)

  1. Since when? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Debian doesn't get much credit, and its become trendy for industry pundits to claim it's become irrelevant.

    News to me. Who's calling it irrelevant?

    1. Re:Since when? by garyisabusyguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If anything it makes me question 'industry pundits' who fail to recognize the layered way that open source projects are able to build on each other.

      Like saying a plant is irrelevant to the flowers that grow on it

      --
      Wherever You Go, There You Are
    2. Re:Since when? by foxed · · Score: 5, Informative

      Steven Vaughan-Nichols is calling it "no longer as important as it once was". See http://www.zdnet.com/blog/open-source/the-new-debian-linux-irrelevant/8218

    3. Re:Since when? by countertrolling · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Somebody named Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols the third. Should be working at the DMV

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    4. Re:Since when? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      agreed. debian is probably the most successful linux distribution ever, and i'd probably turn to freebsd before another linux distro.

      sadly, one often hears a sense on the debian mailing lists, etc, that users (and even debian developers) would like to make debian slicker and more appealing to desktop users (more like ubuntu, or mint, for example). i consider this (especially the infighting) to be a huge mistake. ubuntu is just "the externalization of all the tweaks suitable for desktop users", and I consider this to be "The Right (tm)" solution to the "how best to please everyone all the time" problem (aka the "world domination syndrom") that most distros suffer from.

      i really appreciate debian as a solid foundation. fwiw, i usually install a base system and then add on from there.

      debian, and all the derivative distros should work together while supporting these types of forks... ubuntu should just be a repository of exactly/only the packages that are tweaked or added above and beyond the debian packages. it should be reasonable to just add an ubuntu repo to my sources file and do an upgrade to get to a typical ubuntu.

    5. Re:Since when? by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Say who? If you're going to call others irrelevant, shouldn't you first have some modicum of relevancy yourself?

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    6. Re:Since when? by JustOK · · Score: 4, Funny

      many of the ones using a broadcom chip can't get online to talk about their experiences

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    7. Re:Since when? by sg_oneill · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Oh absolutely. I recently came to realise just how much I took Debian for granted when I had to set up a Django site with Post-GIS on a CentOS (5.5) box.

      Out of the box Centos only supported Python 2.4(!) and if you update it, you break everything. So trying to install a parallell version, I tried to use the EPEL repository to install Python 2.6. All good and fine until I realised I had to recompile my own pysocopg2 driver.

      Then I realised Postgres and PostGIS where way too old for django. Could I update? Nope! the 8.4 version in epel didnt have any obvious version of PostGIS.

      Giving up at wasting 2 days of my clients time recompiling things, trying to patch broken scripts, fighting busted versions of upgraded non supported software and pulling hair out, I badgered the host to install Debian squeeze for me (thanks Rackforce!) and they did.

      Heres how I then did all this without pain on Squeeze:

      root@debian:~# apt-get install postgresql-8.4-postgis
      root@debian:~# apt-get install libapache2-mod-passenger
      root@debian:~# apt-get install python-django python-django-south

      And thats that. Server set up in 4 easy commands. No compiling, no complicated patch files, everything automatically and intelligently downloaded, installed, and checked for conflicts by the OS.

      You'll note it looks like I have missed some things. Not true, apt-get knows installing an apache mod without apache is silly and did it for me, likewise installing postgis without the server itself is also silly. Everything done, checked for sanity, and so on.

      Now of course I know YUM can do all that too, but thats no good to me, when the repository is that old its got 7 year old language distros as its cutting edge.

      Its amazing to think that once upon a time Debian was considered behind the times.

      See why I love this operating system?

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    8. Re:Since when? by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Steven Vaughan-Nichols is calling it "no longer as important as it once was"

      He should know. He's on ZDnet.

      I should know, I'm commenting on Slashdot.

    9. Re:Since when? by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well good Lord, look who the guy who wrote the article in TFA is listening too, fricking Stephen J Nichols! Read some of his past "work" and it is pretty obvious he is a professional Linux troll. All he does is come up with one outlandish theory after another, all designed to stir up the shit and score page views no matter how crazy.

      If you read Nichols history it can be summed up as thus: "X (insert Linux distro or Linux itself) is dying" "it is all a conspiracy by (insert usually MSFT but sometimes Apple or someone else) to kill Linux!" or "Because of X (insert product he's shilling for) THIS year will be the year of Linux on the desktop!"

      He is just the Linux equivalent of Paul Thurott, professional Windows troll. The same way Thurott can be counted on to say anything that makes Windows debates epic troll threads with his total bullshit (Vista is great AND low resource? Really Paul?) the same can be said of Nichols and Linux. Everyone knows Debian isn't going anywhere, hell they've outlasted just about everyone that started at the same time for the love of Pete. This is just Nichols stirring up the shit, and the guy who wrote TFA either took the trollbait or was desperate for some page views.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  2. You can't just count packages and draw conclusions by melted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can't just count packages and draw conclusions from counts. Some of the packages haven't been updated in years. Some are only used by like five users on the planet. Some are so buggy they won't even run.

    Weigh them by how many people install and use them, and you've got something to talk about, though.

  3. Debian still supports PowerPC by joeyadams · · Score: 5, Informative

    Debian is one of the last major Linux distros still supporting PowerPC (along with Gentoo, Arch Linux PPC, and a few others). Ubuntu discontinued official PowerPC support in 2007, and Fedora did the same in 2010. I'm tempted to install Debian 6 on my Apple eMac, replacing Fedora 12 (which reached EOL a couple months ago).

  4. Re:analogy by grumbel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That is how it should be, but that is not how it is. Debian is not some generic distribution-construction-kit, but instead Debian is a complete normal independent Linux distribution and that is exactly where I see the problems. Ubuntu, just as the other distributions based on Debian, isn't a real Debian with a few extra packages installed, but a completely different thing, having its own complete package dependency tree that is incompatible to that of Debian. You might have luck installing Ubuntu packages on Debian or visa versa, but you might as well have not. There is no Debian base system to which developers can develop their packages that will then automatically be compatible with all Debian based distribution, you still have to build every package for every distribution.And thats really the crux, instead of having a unified base with which you can reach a large part of Linux users, you have heavy fragmentation. See for example the whole Launchpad auto builder infrastructure, great for building stuff for Ubuntu, but wanna build something for another Debian based distro or even Debian itself? Tough luck, that stuff is Ubuntu only.

    At this point I would really welcome it when Debian would work towards becoming a proper base system for other distributions to build on in a proper way, not the kind of hacky one that is practiced today.

  5. Re:You can't just count packages and draw conclusi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Popularity contest statistics for popularity-contest says that 99.76% of the almost hundred-thousand Debian users sending statistics back to the "popularity contest" have installed the application which gathers such statistics.

  6. Re:analogy by TBBle · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ubuntu is to Debian as Stalin is to Lenin?

    --
    Paul "TBBle" Hampson
    Paul.Hampson@Pobox.Com
  7. Re:I love Debian by eldepeche · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Debian cares, and it's their job to care. You should probably read the release notes before you upgrade between major versions.

    I think the best way to draw attention to hardware that doesn't function without non-free drivers and firmware is to have a distribution that will take a principled stand against including such software. That way, you can try to install Debian on a computer and know exactly what is supported by free software.

  8. debian is better for n00bs by tonytraductor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally, I don't understand why people claim that Ubuntu is more "user-friendly". I tried ubuntu for about a year before finally taking the dive into Debian (had used Fedora/RH for 8 years prior, but finally got tired of yum breaking stuff). Stuff broke on Ubuntu (not as much as Fedora!), and I wasted time fixing it. I installed Ubuntu for a few n00bs, friends who were tired of their virus/crash ridden XP, etc. They all became frustrated, because, well, stuff broke, and they didn't know how to fix it. Now, when my Mom got an old computer from a friend, a 400hmz PII with like 128mb ram, I installed Lenny on it for her. It's run great ever since, without a single problem (time to go update her to Squeeze, though). I've been using Debian on all my desktops now for about 2 years, upgraded to Squeeze last weekend. The most trivially easy, seamless upgrade ever. (can't be said of ubuntu's frantic release schedule, where every new silly snake release breaks more stuff). Nothing ever breaks in Debian. I haven't had a single software problem since making the move, and I can't imagine ever moving away, now. It's rock-solid, impregnable, and it just works. I don't get what's supposedly so "user-friendly" about Ubuntu. For one thing, I kind of agree with Tuomo Valkonen about "usability" anyway. Do what I want, only what I want, and stay out of the way. Ubuntu makes too many decisions for the user, and not always good ones (usually tying a ton of bloat together in "metapackages" in such fashion that you can't remove some useless crap like, say , cowsay, or something, without removing your entire window manager). Debian allows me to install what I need, precisely, no more no less. And for n00bs, it doesn't break and cause problems.

  9. This is how I see it. by Beelzebud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Ubuntu disappeared tomorrow would the Debian team notice?

    If Debian disappeared tomorrow would the Ubuntu team notice?

    Now ask yourself. Who exactly isn't relevant?