As long as it's not a mandatory switch, I can't see any issue with this.
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It's the same drama as with the home directory replacement they announced and that no-one ever used.
homed
isn't exactly a home directory replacement, more of an extension. You can mix and match homed and normal home directories like you want (on a per-user basis at least, not within a single user). It does have some nice things, such as user-password based encryption of the home directory, so the password is required to unlock it (no admin access) or automatically using subvolumes on btrfs.
Even when that releases, it doesn't mean distros will switch to it. Just because it's systemd, doesn't always mean it's better. Just look at network manager vs systemd-networkd. Correct me if I'm wrong but afaik they are made to serve the same purpose and most distros prefer Network Manager over systemd-networkd.
However, distributions like Fedora will definitely be in the lead, judging by previous experiences and stories of adapting new Linux technologies and Systemd components.
I wonder if this is still true, now that he no longer works for RedHat, but Microsoft.
Whp is this "Lennart Poettering" character, anyway? I suspect he might be secretly working for Microsoft.
It stopped being secret a couple of years ago.
Glad to see PoetteringOS has still not infected the *BSD family members /s And I'll gladly use Doas on Linux if need be, thank you.
In the old days, it was Emacs trying to do everything. Now, it's the SystemD.
That was so bad that vim users needed to make nvim to handle Emacs envy, and every modern ide tries to do the same in worse ways.
(Not trying to start a holy war, I use both)
Artix, Devuan, Void, Alpine Linux are the way to go
Also Gentoo and Guix as mentioned in the comments
Dudes trolling, right?