.... yet my biggest fear still remains: That TC will end up being just an interesting "small distro" for old computers
I believe the opposite to be true.. We live in a world of ever increasing bloat quite often
introduced through feature creep. Combine that with the fact that now 'Every one is a developer'.
Meaning fringe distros including wiz bang apps, providing little added system benefit, that are often poorly written.
Basically making toys for newcomers to feel edgy with.
The ultra light weight and completely modular aspect of TC is actually filling a niche that is
not really being filled by any one else. The fact they are not trying to be a wiz bang distro,
I find admirable.
With the world moving more and more to VM's and containerized systems, makes TC the shining
star for things to come. Being able to effortlessly snap together super lean purpose made instances
at the tip of your fingers, is a gold mine. This is as close to creating bare metal hardware
appliances as your gonna get... For professionals, TC looks to be the ideal toolbox of the future.
With the added bonus that it is also approachable by less experienced users, is an icing bonus.
I don't see TC going any where...
So to the point,
iso is not just a file format. It is a file system that lends it self to portability. The fact it
is mountable, and read only lends it self to uses far outside those of just burning a
distro to a CD.. The convenience of using it to distribute an OS is hard to ignore.
What an end user does with it, is up to them.
What I would encourage people to do, is to learn boot loaders, inits, and
explore the strengths of the tools provided them. Trying to convince the world
to kill a well developed and accepted distributed file system, to my ears. Is
like convincing the world to stop using hammers because some one created
a gasoline powered pull start hammer, and they swear its gonna take the world
by storm.