Interview With Linus 305
Hairy1 writes " Cisco has an interview with Linus which discusses among other things his thoughts - or rather lack of thoughts - about Windows.
When asked about Microsoft he said - "Well, I don't know. I'm actually not a big Microsoft basher... They're very good at marketing. They're very good at trying to see What do we have to do to sell this? The bad part about it is that it does have a huge market share. And that means that it can be lazy, sort of. They don't have much competition on the desktop, which means that they have very little incentive to really fix some of the problems it does have.""
Ironic isn't it? (Score:1, Interesting)
Are you smoking crack or what... (Score:1, Informative)
Props to Linus (Score:4, Insightful)
As long as there are people that can still do this (and who also possess L33T HAX0R SK1LZ) there will never be a true monopoly in the operating systems market.
-ERTW (EngScis Rule The World)
No doubt! (Score:5, Funny)
I just realized how true this is - My girlfriends mother was visiting this weekend, she has no computer, and indeed has never actually used a computer. She was wondering if Mandrake was Windows XP since she HAD heard of that..
Here's a mirror (Score:2, Informative)
Have at it.
Re:Here's a mirror (Score:5, Funny)
Do you really think CISCO.com is going to be /.'ed enough to need a mirror?
Re:Here's a mirror (Score:2)
Well it seems to be right now...
Re:Here's a mirror (Score:2)
Yep! I told all my friends about it too! I think I personally got 30 signatures added :)
Re:Here's a mirror (Score:1)
Why are you providing a mirror!? It's a Cisco website that isn't Slashdotted at all and never will be! Why don't you wait to see if a site has problems handling load before posting a mirror? Doing otherwise is a bit obnoxious, not to mention illegal.
Re:Here's a mirror (Score:3, Informative)
-russ
mod this down (Score:1)
it's like having to mirror microsoft.com or yahoo.com.. might as well mirror google.com while you're at it.
Mirroring google (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mirroring google (Score:5, Funny)
What the hell is the point of this [google.com]?
Linus doesn't case! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Yet another interview with the Geek that
doesn't care to give his opinion on important issues.
People look up to you Torvalds! You should take a stand - NOW!
Bah ... it *proves* that he cares (Score:3, Informative)
Relevant quote from the article:
I was the technology guy who had no clue about business.
He admits that he does not know enough to have a good opinion, so he keeps it to himself. *Sniff* ... smells like "maturity" to me ...
I would also like to know Linus's true opinion on the matter, but his voice carries a lot more force than an unknown's voice (like mine!), would. That means that he has a responsibility to be more careful in what he says than I have to be.
Re:Bah ... it *proves* that he cares (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bah ... it *proves* that he cares (Score:3, Interesting)
In Aikido, you don't try to destroy your opponent by bashing hell out of him.
You destroy him by aligning with him, turning so that you face the same direction, allowing him throw himself using his own momentum. All you do is facilitate his action. He does all the work.
it's rather like bullfighting, I suppose. Only a fool would take the bull head-on. Rather, what's done is to let the bull pass by.
Of course, the matador then goes and sticks the bull full of spears. Linus, I think, is more subtle: he's slowly moving toward the wall. One of these times, the bull is going to run into that wall.
Which makes for an oddly appropriate metaphor, given that I'm really refering to Windows. Can't have a Window without a wall...
(And I suppose I could, if I worked at it, get in some bull-in-china-shop and stones-glass-houses stuff...)
Re:Linus doesn't case! (Score:2, Redundant)
His indifference to Microsoft and Windows is inspiring to me. If only all Linux supporters were so confident in Linux that they didn't bother to attack Windows. . .
Re:Linus doesn't case! (Score:2)
Last time i checked (Score:1)
Seems he has calmed down a bit...
Re:Linus doesn't case! (Score:2)
Of course , that he refrains from MS-Bashing *could* mean that he couldn't give a flying fuck. It could also mean that he doesn't believe it.
And anyway, *WHO CARES*! What should be important to you is *YOUR* opinion.
Of course even more important is my opinion!
Microsoft are lazy? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft are lazy? (Score:3, Insightful)
cloning the windows interface for linux still involves a lot of work, and I would not call the people who are trying to do this lazy. Microsoft is already at that point, and all they need to do it make a few tweaks and add drivers every year or so, so they can release a new version and continue generating income.
Not that I am in favor of the Windowsization of Linux interfaces, but I don't think that it is lazy. All of that coding is hard work, but also rewarding to those who do it.
Re:Microsoft are lazy? (Score:2)
But seriously... he's only talking about innovation. Sure, it may take lots of hard work to clone the Windows Explorer file manager again... but that doesn't make it innovative.
Re:Microsoft are lazy? (Score:3, Insightful)
The lazy part came from the original message head. I agree with you about the difference between hard work and innovation.
People expect Linux to work like Microsoft. (Score:3, Insightful)
They'll choose the one that requires the least retraining on their part. THAT is why Microsoft products get cloned.
-russ
Re:People expect Linux to work like Microsoft. (Score:2)
I'm not saying they aren't better, just that they aren't undeniably so, as you seem to imply.
-Erik
Linus, always a classy guy... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Linus, always a classy guy... (Score:2)
... yeah _this_ time (Score:5, Informative)
"I'd rather listen to Newton than to Mundie. He may have been dead for almost three hundred years, but despite that he stinks up the room less."
Although it was a funny quote, IMO Linus went too far with it. I'm sure all the Linux geeks giggled, but it's just not very professional, and if we want Linux to have a clean image (I do), than we gotta have a clean fight - not a cat fight.
Re:... yeah _this_ time (Score:2)
You're absolutely right. However, we have picked the wrong opponent for a clean fight.
Re:... yeah _this_ time (Score:2)
Re:... yeah _this_ time (Score:2)
That's where you're wrong. Most people -- real people -- can't stand the sneaky, sterile, euphemized corporate-speak; it comes off like a press release devoid of all emotion.
IMO, Linus has struck the right balance between zealot and Spock. :)
(Oh, and a quick aside on the subject of euphemisms: DON'T let them "renice" the word "recession" into "economic downturn"! -- Sick'em Carlin!)
nope! (Score:2)
That quote applies to Socialism, not Communism.
Re:Linus, always a classy guy... (Score:2, Interesting)
those who never study history... (Score:2, Interesting)
Kind of like Bin Laden and the US.
Wake up. Linux has (prettymuch declared) enemies. What you're advocating is the stance that the US took before world war II, and before the september 11th attacks.
Life doesn't work that way. You can't just retreat into your shell and ignore the world - if you do, someone in the world will come along and eat you (metaphorically speaking, of course). Those who don't adapt, die.
Essentially, closing your eyes doesn't mean other people can't see you, no matter how much you wish that it did.
Re:Linus, always a classy guy... (Score:2)
Nice try but wrong.
Sun's products are based on "Open Standards" UNIX-based systems. That means that anyone can replicate their product with some hardware engineering and by paying a fee an industry group, or by using PC-compatible stuff and reverse engineering (Linux).
It also means that it's impossible for Sun to have a monopoly. And lo and behold, there's been hundreds of companies over the years that have sold fundamentally the exact same thing that Sun sells.
I could be wrong (Score:2)
Re:I could be wrong (Score:3, Informative)
According to this [800-all-news.com], this interview appears to be from last May 18th.
I suppose it could be a different one, but it's a Charlie Rose interview that discusses the same topics.
Re:I could be wrong (Score:2)
It's intentional - easy to search for a string when looking for my past comments. If it was totally correct, other people's stuff would come up in the search (perhaps). It's good enough for my purposes.
Same old, same old... (Score:5, Insightful)
:You own linux?
:No
:No
:Huh...??? I couldn't care less
:Ok, this is stupid... don't you want to ask me about the decision about andre vs rick's VM system... or potential changes for 2.5?
So when are people going to get it through their minds that he doesn't care... i've never met the man, never spoken to him... but from all the interviews i've heard and read thats the conclusion that i've come to. Linux cares about tinkering... creating... and programming. Basically the technology. He doesn't care about business... *sigh*. I would love to hear an interview on technology with him... that would be incredible. I remember in that pbs show, the interviewer actually asked him how he got started programming... and you could see him get excited and start talking about an old video game he wrote way back in the day. Aww... I wouldn't have him any other way.
ps - I think the interviewers need to read up on some of linus's quotes, my personal fav being
"I'm a bastard and proud of it"... closely followed by:
"If you didn't read my last post, go back and do it and make sure to read the line about me being a bastard twice".
Promotion (Score:1)
Re:Same old, same old... (Score:2, Informative)
You can order transcripts from here. [800-all-news.com]
Damn reporters... (Score:2, Insightful)
reporters.
Just let them monitor the kernel list for a while, then you get a much better idea of Linu[sx]. I really liked the decision to just swap VM systems in the middle of 2.4
Marijn
Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attention (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately its the few who do turn a technical argument into a religious one that give the rest of us a bad name and get the attention from the media. I still believe the majority of Linux users choose it because its the best tool for the job, not because Windows is evil and wrong and completely technically inferior (becuase it isn't).
However, that doesn't make much of a story for the media, and doesn't give the trolls something to talk about. Hence the nasty reputation of the ranting Linux zealot. This sucks.
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:3)
One word: politics. Do you really believe that the major players in the Linux / free software community don't have complete overthrow of the proprietary software "regime" in the back of their minds when they say such things? It's only a matter of time. Cut the crap with that 'best tool for the job' business. And yes, greed is evil and wrong.
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:3, Flamebait)
To some extent - the technical ones would like for Linux to replace Windows in every situation, but they don't hate Windows or Windows users on some personal level or see that Linux can replace Windows in every way (hating Microsoft, OTOH
A follow up poster put it simply: the difference between the silent technical types working away making Linux am even more viable alternative and the ranting `Windows is inferior in every way and must die now' folk is maturity. I'm inclined to agree.
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:4, Interesting)
Personally, I really hope that Linus and the others really are just in category A. Because I think that when people are focused on improving linux and not destroying microsoft the development of the OS will be much better.
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:2)
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:3, Insightful)
The lead programmers probably don't care.
But the personality leaders(ESR, RMS, etc) certainly care and push the trolling to the edge of reason.
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:2)
Actually, I work for Burger King
Re:ligious argument (Score:5, Insightful)
Curious parallel, at a time when we're entering a major war that's essentially a religious argument. There is no OS but Windows and Gates is its prophet. There is no freedom but American and Bush is its prophet. There is no god but Allah and bin Laden is his prophet.
Maybe, on a certain level, these all are religious wars. We are somehow in cultures that want one answer to be a total answer: one god, one OS, one brand of freedom, one superpower. Okay, we don't all want that. Some of us are happier in a world with many gods, many OSes, many freedoms, diverse powers. But that's why bin Laden, Gates, Falwell see us as decadent and evil.
So if there's a deeper psycho-social vortex that sucks so many members of our cultures in mono-moniacle delusions, whether of the defeated fascist kind, the waning communist kind, or the ascendant worship at the temples of Microsoft and Disney ... well, don't we have to somehow ease the effects of that deeper vortex if we're to get on with our personal choices of OSs and goddesses and musics and causes to die for, and not be sucked into the looming battles of the competing vortexes, each of which believes not just in its immortality, but that, "There can be only one!"
Re:ligious argument (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh, wait. Mac OS zealots are constantly being 1) made fun of by everyone else, 2) told they are complete idiots, 3) reminded of that 95% operating system.
The truth is, passion for something one believes in is a good thing, regardless of what that something is. But fanatical devotion is when things can get bad.
I think Mac OS fanatics are a good example of how a fanatic should act. You tell others of why you think something is better, and argue to prove it. You don't kill people who you disagree with (as anti-abortionist fanatics do), punish teammates who "sympathize" with the "enemy" (as those RedHat fanatics did, and as government, and therefore society, does), or force your beliefs upon others (as every nation in power has done throughout history).
If only people were content to tell other people why they think something is great or better, and leave it at that.
"I think Mac OS is the best OS, and using it is its prophet," said the Mac OS, Windows, DOS, Solaris, Linux, and FreeBSD user.
Re:ligious argument (Score:2)
- There is no car but Ford, and Henry is its prophet.
- There is no kitchen tool but the food processor and Quisonart is its prophet.
- There is no underwear but tightey-whiteys and Hanes is its prophet.
Gee, hold on why I sell my car, throw out my kitchen utensils and buy all new underwear. I never knew these were religious issues.
-Erik
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:4, Insightful)
Antipathy towards MicroSoft-the-company's a different thing, though, as individuals run it and individuals are responsible for the fact that it seems to have no respect for the laws of the United States. Which happens to be my country. As a citizen of this country, it is perfectly reasonable for me to loath the company and its leadership for its business practices.
But hate Windows, per se? Like most folks, I need to use it from time to time, and other Microsoft products. Some of them work well enough, none of them are worth hating.
In a world where MicroSoft acted as a responsible corporate citizen I would have no problem with them. My feelings about their software would be unchanged - hey, Win2K's a lot more stable than NT, cool! - but my feelings about their company would be a *lot* different.
We in the Linux community - and in the world at large - have every reason in the world to dislike MicroSoft-the-company.
What is there to like about a corporation that falsified evidence in court? That ignores consent decrees? Whose very success is due to their having violated a contract with two programmers in Seattle (who'd written what became the basis for DOS)?
Re:Its the squeeky wheel that gets the most attent (Score:4, Insightful)
But hate Windows, per se? Like most folks, I need to use it from time to time, and other Microsoft products. Some of them work well enough, none of them are worth hating.
Karl Fogel, author of The CVS Book [red-bean.com], points out that open-source software is designed differently than closed source software. He makes many rather insightful observations in the odd numbered chapters (in the printed book) about how open-source software is different. I spent a few minutes searching for a couple great quotes... but saddly his text is heavily designed towards a tutorial and not a reference.
One of the really important differences is that open-source software is designed to expose to the user a good conceptual model of how it works and what it's really doing internally. Perhaps this is because the author of the code also designs the user interface, but it's often times done this way so that users can understand the inner workings of the program, at least in a conceptual way, and perhaps become involved in the coding. (Karl's CVS book is well worth the money for the chapters that aren't downloadable if you're interested in the reasons for these sort of design issues)
Now some might argue that users are better off on a "need to know" basis, and the point of software is to bundle up all algorithms so the user doesn't need to worry about them. People who feel this way probably like closed source software quite a bit and it seems likely they would be uncomfortable using many open source programs.
Personally, I quite like having a deeper understanding of what software is really doing. Sometimes I don't bother to read the finer details, but it's nice to know that they are there and available should I want to know. It's empowering to have that sort of information readily available (as well as the source code itself) should I have questions or run into complex problems. It is more work than calling some tech support number, but investing the time to read about and learn what is really going on almost always leads to better solutions that some lame tech support help desk could provide, and (at least for me) I end up with a better long-term knowledge base.
After many years, particularly in the modern age of thriving open/free software, it's easy to get very used to this sort of openness, where the source is provided, and the design of the program and its documentation is such that you can really learn and understand what it's really doing. It's easy to get used to having command line switches or config files where you can really control things, and documentation that explains not just the "what", but also the "how" and "why" behind the configurable parameters.
It really does become easy to hate closed software, where the innards are some proprietary secret. It becomes easy to truely hate the overall design of "no servicable parts inside", where you get only a few simple dialog boxes to choose only a couple basic parameters, and even the "advanced" dialogs don't really provide access to really control much. It's easy to hate documentation which is a giant inventory of the radio buttions and check boxes, with simple brain-dead descriptions of each that would have been obvious, without any information about how the software really works.
That is the reason I hate Microsoft Windows "per se". Actually, Windows itself isn't so bad... you can actually learn quite a bit about how it works internally (I have a couple good books on the topic), and there are lots of good 3rd party tools that can give access to much of the internal workings. Still, it is the overall closed design that I personally hate about much of the world's closed source software.
One ad homenim deserves another (Score:2)
Re:This is amazing. (Score:2)
Including Judge Jackson in his Findings of Fact. These are hardly unsubstantiated rumors we're talking about here. But of course the antitrust case only scratches the surface of why some people hate microsoft.
Of course, the millions of Microsoft software users and developers don't seem to notice this for some reason.
I think more than a few of them have heard of the antitrust trial. Anyway, you can't necessarily invalidate an argument by merely pointing at an ignorant person and saying "he/she doesn't agree with you". That's like saying "Global warming can't possibly be true because people are still using more and more energy." Um, no, that is not a valid form of argument.
Great Interview, Charlie. (Score:1, Flamebait)
Exactly what axe are you grinding? (Score:3, Funny)
Final counts:
Torvalds - 1669
Rose - 456
Never let facts get in the way of looking stupid though...
LEXX
More Edison than Rockefeller? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:More Edison than Rockefeller? (Score:4, Interesting)
"Edison's strategy was to convince everyone that Westinghouse's AC current was unsafe. He hired scientists to travel around and give public demonstrations of this by electrocuting cats, dogs, and horses with AC current. His ultimate victory came with New York State's switch from hanging to the electric chair, which was, of course, powered by a Westinghouse AC generator."
Edison wasn't really that great of a scientist, he was just exceptionally good at marketing his ideas and himself.
Carnegie, Rockefeller, Morgan, Edison... all great men, but ruthless as hell. Gates certainly follows in all of their footsteps.
Re:More Edison than Rockefeller? (Score:3, Funny)
I'm sure that if Linux slandered Telsa, then Alan would have something to say about it <grin>.
HH
Sad, yet true (Score:4, Insightful)
If we want to see MS lose their massive market share there needs to be a product capable of competing with Windows. As much as I love Linux, this is not the OS. Linux is a server OS, whereas Windows is a desktop OS. So to compete with Windows, there must be an open source desktop OS. Sadly there is only one other desktop OS right now, and thats macOS. Unfortunatly I have yet to see such project even discussed, let alone acted on.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:1)
Most of the diffrences are in the packaging and UI.
Why reinvent the wheel?
It would however be interesting to see somone make a desktop out of something other than X.
X is not linux.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:4, Insightful)
What we need to do is start a project which will create these applets, with a consistant look and feel, which will appear in a control panel when an app is installed.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:4, Interesting)
I, on the other hand, dread the day that there is a wizard for every /etc file.
There are a couple trends I hate about GUI config, and certainly not all config programs are guilty of this, but I have noticed all of these "in the wild" at certain times:
Although nobody has made one that I've seen, I'd love to see a configurator that has the original text config file in a window pane below or beside the main options panel, and update it as options are changed, so you can see the actual commands and what is being changed. Maybe even color highilight the changed lines. That would rock.
We don't need to _start_ anything, just join one of the existing projects if you want to help: linxuconf [solucorp.qc.ca], gnomecc [gnome.org], webmin [webmin.com], etc.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:2)
The format would then perhaps allow for "presentation" data to be inserted such that an app could 'index' them, and put up standardised wizards and config screens, as well as letting someone search for a 'config topic' and go straight to the crunch.
Then Red hat, Mandrake , debian etc could config the app to reflect the look and feel of the particular distro to suit marketing droids, plus being XML and all, any old fool could still VI the config files for great justice.
umm... (Score:2)
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:2)
Except that Windows already has something far more complicated, the registry. How does the "non techie" cope with that
Until there are applets and/or wizards for every single file in
One critisism of KDE is that it follows too closely the end user admin paradigm of Windows. Without making it easy for a proper admin to set things up. Something which many command line applications manage far better.
Why should end users be expected to know what a browser proxy is or mess around setting "email servers".
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:3, Insightful)
Windows users do not deal with the registry, they use control panel.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:2)
-Erik
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:1)
...I remember Red Hat 4.? and what it looked like a few years ago. Though I've "converted" to Debian, I must also admit that all the contemporary Linux distros have moved much closer to being desktop OS's over the past few years.
This movement has been much slower than what we are used to seeing, when compared to a software giant such as Microsoft. But Linux IS moving forward. We are getting better and better kernels, and the various desktop enviroments are progressing rather nicely, too. And remember, we have more choices than Microsoft ever considered. That, if anything is my major beef with Microsoft. They make too many decisions for us and we have no say in the matter. It leaves me feeling as if I'm stuck with less than I wanted. But I have NEVER felt this with Linux.
Patience and getting involved are two keys to seeing Linux succeed on the desktop. Linux does not have to bring Microsoft to it's knees or wipe it out to be successful. It just needs to meet our needs better.
Re:Sad, yet true (Score:2)
I disagree. Microsoft already has a major competitor that we often overlook: Microsoft. Windows XP is forced to compete with Win98,ME,NT,and 2000... products that many users have bought just in the last few years and are still fairly satisfied with.
So MS is forced to add fancier features, launch a major marketing blitz, and -gasp- even do a little innovating. Doesn't sound like a monopoly to me. (though I will concede that they've got an OEM monopoly)
fancier features?! (Score:2)
A marketing blitz is _not_ a 'feature'!
You can order the video if you want (Score:3, Informative)
It's cisco goddammnit (Score:5, Funny)
Arrowpoint load balancers (Score:2)
The thing to remember, though, is that a load balancer is only as good as the servers you've put behind it. I manage a big hosting network with lots of these boxes, and it's not uncommon to see an entire site come down during times of extremely heavy load. Inevitably it's a network of Windows servers that comes down. The site gets lots of traffic for whatever reason, then one of the servers bluescreens or otherwise crashes. The load balancer does its job: takes that server out of the rotation, and the traffic gets sent to the other servers in the farm. The problem with Windows servers, though, is that with the increased load resulting from one server being out of the rotation, is that they start crashing too. This effect propagates exponentially until there aren't any servers left.
And before you say "oh, he's just Microsoft bashing" keep this in mind: some of our customers run Arrowpoint/Cisco load balancers with Linux or Solaris servers, and these networks never die. In fact, the servers keep up so well that sometimes if there's an improperly configured load balancer, it will crash instead. (There's a per-port buffer size limitation that you have to stay inside of. Windows can't pump out data fast enough to blow it up, but Linux and Solaris both can.)
I saw this on TV (Score:1)
I saw this interview on public television a few months ago. My brother was flipping through the channels and I'm like "hey, that kinda looks like Linus Torvalds". He flipped back and we're like "holy !#* that is Linus; cool!".
It was exciting to see him being interviewed on TV. Is Jay Leno next ;-)
?
Interviews with Linus Torvalds (Score:4, Insightful)
Linus has stated that he does not try to be a threat to Microsoft and he does not view MS as competition. It would indeed be an steep uphill battle for Linux to be a competitor in the home computing world (whether you like it or not).
Some people are so blind in their love for a certain OS, whether it be Windows or BSD or Linux or Mac OS or Unix, that they won't admit the truth. Windows and Linux have a different goal.
Torvalds has stated that he was interested at Windows NT at one point. He says lately it looks more and more like traditional Windows with a stabler kernel. That is what does not interest him. In an interview he said "In my opinion MS is a lot better at making money than it is at making good operating systems." And maybe he is right.
BTW: Somebody might want to format that post a little better, it has awkward page breaks all over.
Linux Needs More Rockefellers (Score:4, Insightful)
Very nice article.
Rose: What's the best and worst thing you can say about Windows?
Rose: I didn't ask you to bash 'em.
Torvalds: Well, you did ask me to say something bad about them.
That is great. It shows someone who not only understands himself, but he understands the world around him. He's not drawn into petty bickering, and he is obviously not so filled with hate or angst. It's quite obvious he wants to make a good product, but also doesn't seem to be swept up in material gain above what he may or may not have. I remember when I first started using Linux and was introduced to ipfw in Redhat 5.something. I was truly shown something technically refreshing. While I encourage desktop GUI pursuits, many a Linux contributor seems to be caught up in widgets and not solving real problems or addressing new ideas. I don't mean that GUI's is every contributor's focus, but it seems to be the main thrust.
Linux will be truly successful if it can go places *before* Microsoft can, and do them better than Microsoft can. It wouldn't help to have a couple Rockefellers to help out the cause.
Leadership with humility (Score:1)
In Scandanavia, everyone gets paid. :-)
But his clever dance around the Edison/Rockefeller insinuation (same topic), along with his other responses, infers his steady practice of english and a good grasp on current politics. Even with the interviewer trying repeatedly to put words in his mouth, he held his own nicely.
Here's hoping this fellow continues to extend his US visa.
Windows is evil, but... (Score:1)
Better questions? (Score:5, Insightful)
Therefore we could collect a few questions for Linus.
Like:
What about Andrea vs Rick's VM system?
What important changes are already planned for 2.5?
Could you think of a situation/decision where other issues (like ego) went to be more important than the technical issues?
What do you do with your time besides working at Transmeta and hacking on Linux?
Then again, it would even be nicer if Slashdot could collect 10 questions for the next Slashdot interview
Interview I'd like to see (Score:5, Funny)
2. Are you sick of being asked the same questions?
3. Would you rather code, or drink a beer?
4.
5. Do you code better while half-drunk?
6. Do you code better when fully drunk?
7. Would you drive a stake through my heart if
I asked you about microsoft?
8.
9.
10. Do you regret linux's popularity in regards to
the fact that you've been forced into the
position of "geek god"
11. Does RMS get on your nerves as much as he does mine?
12. If you're ever in tennessee, would you consider hanging out with me?
13. What are the odds of the windows API's ever getting kernal support for running windows apps natively?
e-mail: mccann@telalink.net
Linus - if you're out there, answer these questions: Inquiring minds want to know!
It's actually slashdotted!! (Score:2, Interesting)
This box must have some kind of bandwidth control because I can't believe a CISCO website would get slashdotted.
This has to look bad for CISCO.
Now would be a good time to mod up those mirrors instead of modding them down for karma whoring...
Follow the Example (Score:3, Insightful)
Hrm (Score:2, Redundant)
Just as a secondary comment: why don't people give up this whole M$ bashing thing? I really thing that people need to just let it go. Bashing M$ just makes our community look childish.
Rants and Free Speech synclog.net [synclog.net]
Re:Hrm (Score:2, Funny)
Blasphemer! Satan dwells amongst us!
He's a witch! BURN HIM!!! BURN HIM!!!
;)
Linus: Desktop is viable (Score:4, Insightful)
But the reason it will eventually succeed is that Microsoft can't compete against it, can't put it out of business. It will eventually succeed because it cannot be stopped.
By the way, I just got Mandrake 8.1 and the desktop looks phenomenal. Once the office products start to mature and we see some more games I think the desktop will start seeing market share numbers like Linux on the server. You have to understand, the server has 30 years of development behind it. The desktop will eventually get there. Its not a question of if, but when.
Linus is amazing (Score:5, Funny)
How does he decide what's for dinner???
Re:ho hum (Score:1)
Kernel == OS (Score:1)
Re:LT: "I am your GOD" (Score:4, Funny)
Who does he think he is?
Someone with a better sense of humor than you?
Re:Reflection on comments (Score:2)
Nothing wrong with that. "It" is singular, the legal entity Microsoft Corp. is singular - and not a collective noun either. Using "they" or "them" can be a problem since now you're not really talking about the single company, but rather "all the people who work there."
For example:
"Microsoft is poised to launch Empty Box 1.0. It hopes there will be enough customers to provide a platform for future upgrades."
"Microsoft is poised to launch Empty Box 1.0. They hope there will be enough customers to provide a platform for future upgrades."
Who is "they"? The company? No - it's one company. The people who work there? Then it needs to say so.
Yeah yeah - I had this beaten into me on a newspaper with a rather original fining system. Companies are singular.
Re:Reflection on comments (Score:2)
Re:The /. crowd is so hypocritical. (Score:2)
Dude, not only has that been mentioned before, (by the founder of 3Com no less) it even has a Slashdot article. [slashdot.org]
Re:Why MS PATCHES? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft Lazy, How do you figure? (Score:3, Insightful)
Windows XP: Windows 2000 with new applications relevant to markets it wants to control (digital imaging, instant messaging) welded into the OS, along with bugfixes, eye candy, and irritating anti-piracy crap built in so they can squeeze consumers with multiple PCs.
Office XP: Stepping stone towards Office.Net, where if you wanna run the spellchecker, it'll cost ya.
XBox: Sony and Nintendo are splitting a huge pie, Microsoft wants as big a piece of it as they can get.
Pocket PC 2002: Microsoft hasn't killed off Palm yet.
~Philly
His name is... (Score:2, Funny)