On 08/20/12 16:42, Mark Felder wrote:
Those in on the core teams here are very well aware. Did you notice
we've survived this long without ALSA? :-) However, this is very good
reading for anyone who hasn't looked at Linux lately, and it's worth
mentioning that this is snowballing quickly. I used to really like some
Linux distros. I've been working closely with FreeBSD for 3 years now
and after watching Linux change in those 3 years from this distance I'm
not sure I want to go back. Everything that originally excited me about
*nix operating systems is gone; it's a big convoluted mess now. This
isn't a good sign and I hope someone has the sense enough to stand their
ground and tell RedHat/Poettering "NO".


TEAR DOWN THIS WALL, MR GORB^H^H^H^HPOETTERING

I had the honor to meet that Mr. Poettering in person at a conference a while ago and tried to discuss the portability issues caused by the imminent proliferation of an over-engineered and unnecessary subsystem like systemd. My conclusion was that the guy talks a lot and never listens (mirroring his on-line behavior) and in general is a type of guy I had rather see in the enemy camp, instead of in the ranks of a (in my case) valued business partner. Also, he appears to have practically free reign within Red Hat, where currently nobody seems to have a clear overview of the OS related issues and system initialization is considered a minor technical feature. So I don't think you should expect Mr. Poettering to tear down any walls any time soon 8-)

I can only hope that FreeBSD and the leftover systemd averse Linux distros can prevent higher level subsystems (like Xorg, KDE, Xfce, etc) to depend too much on current and future systemd features. Maybe this is an opportunity for the mostly invisible core team of FreeBSD to publicly take a position here, if only to take away concerns of users with respect to systemd portability issues in the future.

Kind regards,

Hans Ottevanger



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