Lisi Reisz <lisi.re...@gmail.com> writes: > On Saturday 13 September 2014 21:46:31 lee wrote: >> You users, and the community members, >> whoever they are, need to speak as well. > > Perhaps, just perhaps, many of them don't agree.
Well, I've now seen two people speaking up in response, and 0% of them spoke in favour of systemd. If there were so many people disagreeing, they must be a minority because so few of them speak up. BTW, I'm finding myself trying to get rid of things running on computers I never need or want, which has become a rather tedious task and shouldn't be necessary. It's difficult to rid of such things, and it can be more difficult or even impossible to find out what they actually do in order to decide whether I need them or not. It shouldn't be that way. And I'd also like to hear what advantages systemd actually brings about that would make it desirable. If there were so many people disagreeing that forcing systemd upon the users, why aren't there any of them speaking up and explaining why systemd is supposed to be such a great idea? Perhaps, just perhaps, many users and community members do not disagree. Shall we have a vote? AFAIK, there's nothing that would speak against having one, in this very mailing list. Why not ask the users? Why should only Debian developers be allowed to vote but not the users? Since users are the developers' priority, why do the devs never ask them? And since they never do, I suppose we have to have votes by ourselves. -- Knowledge is volatile and fluid. Software is power. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/87sijspifa....@yun.yagibdah.de