On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 20:27:20 +0300, Hemmann, Volker Armin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Monday 18 December 2006 15:47, Grant wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers.  Is it all in my head?  I
personally still love Gentoo.

there are always several phases in the life of a distri.

Beginning, when it becomes 'cool' and a sudden surge in users, some time of
high popularity, a decline, and at the end, only the users who are
really 'the right ones' for that kind of distri are left.


Not only 'the right ones'. There will always be some number of users who are evaluating the distro.

So the 'always using the cool thing' users are gone and the 'we are using what the cool guys were using' crowd is leaving now. So what? Are they important? No. At some point ubuntu will suffer the same. And then the next cool distro
de jour.

Some decline in user interest is normal - and a healthy process. Because it
removes the 'I use it because it is cool' and 'I use it because everybody
else uses it' type of users.

Where can I get data on the number of Gentoo users and how it changes with time? Are the sync servers reporting the number of portage trees? Are the numbers of subscribers to Gentoo mailing lists available? Can the number of Gentoo developers and the number of developers per package be made known (there is a report somewhere in the thread that the number of developers increased from 60 to 300 in 3 days, but a finer time scale is of interest)?

As far as I understand, software developers normally provide tarballs and distro developers create packages. Do some developers provide packages themselves? If yes, what distros do they choose and how often do they choose Gentoo? It may be interesting to compare these numbers with the number of users.



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Andrei Gerasimenko
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