On Mon, Nov 17, 2014 at 09:20:56PM +0100, Josselin Mouette wrote: > > In retrospect, the CTTE may not be working consensus hard enough, and > > for that, I'm sorry. Working to achieve consensus is very difficult, > > time consuming, and fraught. It takes a huge time commitment, and even > > after spending the time, the CTTE may still have to make a decision.
> I don’t think it is wrong to want to have a decision at some point, if > the attempts at consensus have failed. Keeping issues in the open for > months, even years, is not going to magically solve them. > It’s not because the resolution is wrong, either. Of course, my opinion > is that it is wrong, and that it is going to rain fire on us when > upgraded systems do not behave like freshly installed ones. How do you arrive at the conclusion that this in any way causes upgraded systems to be have differently from freshly-installed ones? The only thing this dependency swap affects is whether installing a DE on top of an existing system which has deliberately opted for a non-default init causes a different init to be chosen. This is not about the choice of init for upgraded systems, /at all/. -- Steve Langasek Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS Debian Developer to set it on, and I can move the world. Ubuntu Developer http://www.debian.org/ slanga...@ubuntu.com vor...@debian.org
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature