I have recently found out that the future of Qt has become uncertain as Nokia, It\'s current owner, has announced they officially have no interest in desktop Qt.
I know
The future of Qt is very much not uncertain. Qt's license has a clause that specifically says that if at any point it is no longer offered, then it becomes public domain. At which point I would imagine that the KDE folks would take over development (since they've considered merging kdelibs with Qt at least a little bit before).
Also, There is a company (Digia?) which is currently offering Qt commerical licenses still.
Finally, Qt5 is actively in development by Nokia, I don't see how it is even close to "dying", simply put, you're misinformed.