I find it hard to believe Gentoo will die in the near or medium future. As a User (yes, i'm not a coder), and part of a project to build a profession standard midi/audio pipeline as a fulltime working environment for film scorers, writers, etc.. Gentoo is the foundation of our setup, and will be as a result of the inadequacies in other distros and projects, for our particular use case. (Writing music with large Sample libs, running a single, or multiple boxes....)
Gentoo does something that other distros don't, and that is, by the nature of its design and source based system, it DOESN'T make generic assumptions about what might constitute an individual users workflow.
Nearly all of you posting so far seem to come at Gentoo, and consequently, base perceptions on good or bad, from a developer/geek/nerd/senseofhumour/pickone point of view. As a User with a particular itch to scratch, it took some effort to build my first Gentoo system. (and i had help from Gentoo users/devs who know what they're doing, but let me do it myself, giving the odd nudge of encouragement here and there) It was a moment of enlightenment, not from a mindset of "I'm a geek now. Wow!", but a practical goal to utilise the freedom one has to build a Gentoo system as small or large as they want, but most importantly, to SUIT A PARTICULAR PUPOSE. As mainstream distros get more and more generic in their assumptions for users, imho, Gentoo, far from dying, stands out more and more as the go to user/purpose workflow system, designed by the user, for a task, or set of tasks.
I use 64bit Gentoo, with a 64bit RT kernel, and Fluxbox, with no icons, flashy 3D effects, or other stuff that is "bloat" for what i do. (It's the choice i have that makes this very important.) As a real world application of the efficiency of such a setup, i can run a better than previous studio setup in 1 Gentoo box, than as was the case in the Win world, where i ran a Win/DAW box, and 5 Gigastudio boxes. (And it was like herding cats to keep them all running at the same time, long enough to get any significant amount of work done.)
I note with interest that so much of the dicussion is based around dev/design/function comparisons with allegedly "easier more user friendly distros", but i add here as an experienced fulltime computer user (since the first music apps began, on Amiga, Fairlight, early Cubase, Logic Audio....), who just wants to get on with the work, and have the system running 24/7 (which it has done without fail for a long time now), the non-generic possibilities available with Gentoo far outweigh the time it might take to get setup. My last Gentoo build took 8 hours, including QT4, Python, A mass of audio and midi based libs, and so on. That 8 hours effort, let's even say one complete day, has resulted in a system for which i need to carry out very little maintenance, if any.
Please don't assume that all Users are dumb browser GUI driven, icon and mouse loving NASA wannabes. O the idea of a "perfect" distros is one that pops up one dialog after another asking "are you sure you want to do this?" Or a stack of menus, sub-menus, sub-sub-menus, and so on.
Being a source based distro puts Gentoo in a unique position. But it's not one of "It doesn't behave like a REAL distro." It's actually much better than that.
We've had a lot of users over at
www.openoctave.org recently, hanging around the bar, wating for our next release, which is soon. Our entire setup is Gentoo based, and there's been a lot of interest in our efficient, some might say barebones approach to building a professional music creation box, with native linux apps.
If the interest is anything to go by, i guess aided by our enthusiasm and practical day to day experiences, then Gentoo, at least from our tiny corner of the linux world, is alive and well, and prospering. We do our bit to promote this excellent distro at the coalface, helping users to get setup, dealing with niggles here and there, in the real world, as we go.
It might seem like Gentoo is dying, but imho, it only appears that way to some, based on their own expectations of what is "dying."
Sorry for a long first post, but i couldn't stand by and watch our default distro get a bit knocked about based on only one or two criteria, without adding a daily real use comment or several, from someone who uses Gentoo all day every day, in a way that completely suits my way of working.
Regards,
Alex Stone.
p.s. I add my appreciation and continued respect to all those devs who contribute to bring us Gentoo now and in the future.