i think these things happened to techno over the past 10 years:
the good:
*it became much easier to afford the gear to make decently-produced techno, which meant the number of artists expanded greatly.
*the emergence of software like ableton greatly expanded what people could do, creatively and production-wise
*creative sub-genres (like minimal) and techno-friendly ones (like dubstep) emerged, and infused some life into techno as a whole
*digital labels emerged as a viable alternative
the bad:
*techno, generally, grew less popular
*a lot of established producers/djs achieved "superstar" status and milked it in annoying ways
*massive numbers of bricks-and-mortar record stores, labels and distributors have died, dealing a massive body blow to techno's economic model
*arguably, the glut of new producers has not resulted in a corresponding surge in creativity, but rather a larger mass of cookie-cutter music.
so what's going to happen to techno over the next ten years?