Yet another Linux distribution shuts down, and the Open Source community should be worried May 22, 2019 https://betanews.com/2019/05/22/antergos-linux-dead/
Generating income with open-source projects is nontrivial. If your stuff is important enough, people will donate if asked. As with GnuPG, for example. Otherwise, ...
Although we at the embryo stage, if South Korea does decide to switch to Linux [https://duckduckgo.com/?q=south korea linux], could this be the revenue source required to make it the viable OS it could be?
The problems with Linux distros aren't diversity or plurality. They are predominantly compatibility and reliability. The world doesn't need more distros; it needs better distros.
I love Antergos. Lately I have not been able to keep it on my computer because I never managed to turn off the computer, I had to do it by removing the power cable. I'm in love with the GNOME environment and Arch. The disappearance of Antergos makes me very sad.
Indeed. The Linux world is awash with ego driven vanity projects and a proliferation of unneeded desktop environments that do nothing to support the operating system as a viable alternative to the major desktop players. Ultimate Edition is perhaps one of the best examples. Calling yourself "TheeMahn" says it all. "You people, do not understand what is coming. I am a Innovator. I am writing software that will be a game changer". Well I'm not exactly sure which game he is referring to but I've yet to encounter anyone who can get this crap to boot and run reliably, if at all.
Scientific Linux and Antergos are shutting down: It's time for Linux Mint to go Cinnamon, the popular desktop environment featured in Linux Mint, makes more sense as a distribution-agnostic package May 30, 2019 https://www.techrepublic.com/articl...-shutting-down-its-time-for-linux-mint-to-go/
I agree. I think we already have way too many "Distro based on a distro" distros. I use Parrot, based on Debian, and it works great. I've previously ran Ubuntu and that worked pretty Dan well too!
I wonder why the author says that "Cinnamon has momentum behind it, as the progressive, feature-rich implementation of the classic desktop paradigm for Linux users. (For comparison, MATE—while venerable—is essentially in maintenance mode.)" Or maybe it is Mint's MATE that's in maintenance mode. AFAIK, Ubuntu MATE is pretty actively developed.
The author might of been able to provide a better informed opinion if they had reviewed the historic facts; for example just look at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Linux_Distribution_Timeline.svg to give an example of perspective of how frequent distros come and go.