Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 8th Mar 2013 16:13 UTC
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Member since:
2005-08-07
The problem is that as they diverge more and more, they will have to maintain more and more of the system themselves. Gradually everything that actually makes people like Ubuntu right now will no longer work on their system. Things like udev, which is why hardware works on an Ubuntu system, will probably gradually depend more and more on systemd, for instance. Services are probably going to more and more target systemd systems because that is where the enterprise distros are heading. Most everything on an Ubuntu system that actually comprises the system is going to become obsolete. Either they move to what everyone else is using or they will basically have their own system. With the systemd vs upstart thing, they have shown a tendency to not adopt what everyone has standardized on, and the rest of the community has shown a tendency to not really care about that. KDE guys are already adamantly refusing to support Mir, because it is a single distro project and they don't do that.
Question is, can Canonical find enough competent people to actually do all this? Mark seems to fancy himself the next Steve Jobs, that's fine, I think it'll be good for everyone involved if they can achieve what they want to. It means the people using Linux because its cool can gradually separate away from the people that actually care about the movement Linux has depended on. Let them compete with the commercial entities, let them fight everyone, that isn't what Linux is about.
Linux is about working together, sharing expertise, becoming better because of everyone involved. It is ironic that the company whose name means all this is acting exactly against it.
Edited 2013-03-10 18:58 UTC