Since we are putting personal anecdotes onto the pile... spacecadet writes: >> The main turn-off people cite to me is our association with GNU. As a >> particularly poignant case study, in conversations with someone who >> has contributed significantly to Guix on my recommendation and did >> not stay around, the primary complaint was not the email-based >> workflow (which was noted as unusual but not overwhelming), but that >> the GNU affiliation *makes them feel uncomfortable in our community*. > > Since this argument is based off personal anecdote, I want to add my > voice to that; if guix split from GNU and the FSF I would become > equally hesitant to continue using and contributing to it. I do not want to speculate on what I would do in case of such a split, but at the end of the day the GNU and FSF "brand" is why I am here today. Few years (oh boy the time does fly) back when I was deciding what weird thing I should learn next, both Nix and GNU Guix were considered. While most of my friends recommended Nix, after some cursory research I decided to go with GNU Guix, to a large degree due to the perceived "guarantees" provided by both the GNU and FSF brands. Would I make the same choice today even on purely technical points? Probably. But I sure did not know enough to make qualified decision as a new potential user back then. If such split would to happen, it would be great to have a better justification than "it makes some people uncomfortable". Because the split (at least if not justified enough) would *also* "make some people uncomfortable" (well, at least me). Have a nice day, Tomas -- There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation, naming things and off-by-one errors.