Wired Interview with Linus Torvalds 453
Tones125 writes "Wired has a lengthy interview with Linus Torvalds contrasting the tedium of his humble life with his superhero cult status, and also briefly mentioning his take on the SCO mess, Richard Stallman and John "maddog" Hall. My favourite quote: "He jokingly refers to himself as Linux's hood ornament"."
Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
My favorite quote is another one:
Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk.
Although I wonder, where did he get that impression. Looking at Linus' face I can say a normal human.
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
Honestly, I think people are missing the point. He wasn't describing Mr Torvalds because he thought that he was a sex god or anything. He was just trying to show that Linux is, in fact, just a human being.
Re:"Normal" people (Score:3, Funny)
I'm sorry, but I refuse to recogni
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
Yeah, that's a good one, but Linus needs round-rimmed glasses, a green army-issue cap, and a teddy bear if he really wants to look like a supply clerk.
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
License plate (Score:2)
Re:License plate (Score:2)
Re:License plate (Score:2)
I was also impressed with his response to the whole RMS/GNU issues. He did the smartest thing posible, simply say he did not want to talk about it. It makes Linus look like a decent guy and RMS look like he is on a power trip.
Re:License plate (Score:2)
you can get whatever you want on your plates.
I have LINUX plates on my car in California.
here's a pic. [ventura.nu]
also, this car is for sale. 2000 GTI VR6 GLX, gotta sell it fast, so the price is waay under bluebook. mail me at gti@ventura.nu if you're interested or want to see more pics.
Re:License plate (Score:2)
if i don't get a better offer before the end of November, it's yours.
Re:License plate (Score:2)
(Actually, ORA is based in Sebastopol.)
Re:Torvalds, 33, looks like a supply clerk. (Score:2)
I liked his mother's line: "As Sara [his sister] and I used to say, just give Linus a spare closet with a good computer in it and feed him some dry pasta, and he'll be perfectly happy," Mikke wrote.
Funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Well that's a surprise.
True costs of Linux (Score:2, Funny)
I know that that's a strong statement to make, but I have evidence to back it up! At one of the major corps(5000+ employees) that I consult for, we wanted to
That's one of the worst trolls I've ever seen (Score:2)
More likely you are just a wannabe slashtroll hiding in Mom's basement.
I know..don't feed the trolls. This one as so bad though that I couldn't resist. A good troll should at least sound plausible!
Re:That's one of the worst trolls I've ever seen (Score:2)
It's an AST. It's satire. Relax.
Mod parent troll^h^h^h comment up! (Score:2)
Linux is obviously a sham, written by weekend hackers, and frankly I'm surprised that the Apache team dared to steal the Microsoft-developed HTTP protocol for their IIS-alike so-called "web server".
IHTB!! [securityfocus.com]
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
Relax bro, SOMEONE got the joke!
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
Relax, it is a joke. (Score:2)
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
> X is the best thing ever to happen to their hardware, but
> there are a lot of (clueless) mac zealots spew at the
> mouth some pretty over-exaggerated stuff.
I believe it. Many Mac users have never really worked in an Enterprise (or even server) environment, thus really don't have a clue what it takes. That's changing now with OS X, but it seems that many of the traditional Mac users are having a hard time coping with a modern OS.
Here's my
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:4, Informative)
-Adam
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
MOD PARENT UP!!!!
Actually, the first link should really point here [securityfocus.com].
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
And why would that be? Because I don't base the vast majority of my knowledge on a language like Visual Basic which was based upon a langu
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
C was developed in the early 70's.
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
While C is at the core of nearly all apps, BASIC is a joke. You just haven't got the punchline yet.
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:2)
BUT HEY, people like to be coddled. So we have MF COBOL for the web, modern RPG, and lots of holdovers from big iron. Personally, if your programmers are too stupid to switch languages, why would you expect them to solve your complex programm
Re:True costs of Linux (Score:3, Funny)
First of all, many people around here don't consider VB a real programming language. And you claim you don't like C, but you need to realize that there is A LOT of code out there written in C.
Linux doesn't support SMP or Journaling file systems? Where did you come from? And Apache is used on servers that serve lots of pages, wheras IIS is used by pages that get defaced.
How did you "integrate" the servers into the server pool? Did you have both lin
Wired Implodes... (Score:2, Funny)
With so many Slashdot users not reading the Wired article, now Wired will suffer a massive loss of advertising revenue due to so many people not accessing their site.
Stallman would not like this quote... (Score:2)
Wrong! That would be "GNU/Linux's hood ornament". And if truly follow Stallman, that would be the bug that hit the hood ornament because its all about him! HIM! HIM! HIM! Muhahahaha! Now where's my HURD so I might smote thy kernel.
Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Stallman may be smart and may have accomplished great things, but his actions bespeak a petulant toddler more than a great man of vision.
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:5, Interesting)
It would seem fairer to me to say that this would have made the article be about both Stalman's work and Torvalds' work.
Stallman may be smart and may have accomplished great things, but his actions bespeak a petulant toddler more than a great man of vision.
Some people seem to perceive Stalman as resentful of Torvalds because Linux stole the spotlight and rendered GNU a distant also-ran. I don't share this perception. I believe that Stalman and Torvalds have very different agendas, which happen to overlap in Linux. Stalman is promoting the idea of Free (liberated) Software. Torvalds is trying to build an operating system.
Put another way, Torvalds has no particular allegiance to free software. The fact that he has licensed Linux under the GPL is incidental not idealogical; it is a means to the end of improving quality and development speed. If there was a non-free way to improve Linux on an ongoing basis, Linus might well adopt it. Stalman never would.
I think it's interesting to compare what our world might look like if either Stalman or Torvalds had never existed. Perhaps if Stalman hadn't come along we'd have Linux but no GNU and no free software ideology (fathoming how a non-free linux could have gathered mass support is left as an exercise to someone other than me). Whereas perhaps if Torvalds hadn't come along, we'd have GNU plus free software ideology but nobody who was as gifted at managing the complex process of kernel development. If it had to come down to one or the other, I'd actually take the world without Torvalds. Even though my definition of "visionary" fits Stalman much better than it fits Torvalds, my reasons for prefering the Stalman world are practical: I believe that the process established by Stalman would have soon enough given rise to someone like Torvalds who could have done approximately as well. People with Torvalds' skill are by no means common, but open source has a very strong natural tendency to distill the uncommon from the common.
People like Stalman who have the vision of a radically different system of values, who proceed from conceiving of the vision to implementing its foundation, who are courageous enough to unequivocally say publicly where they are trying to go... and to actually have those values make a radical and lasting difference for the better after only twenty years... that's my idea of a hero.
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:2)
If this were true, he'd want to call it Stallmanix, he would have started the Stallman Foundation, and there would be a "Richard Stallman Song".
> What has GNU done for me lately?
GNU? as in the GNU projecteers?
They only maintain glibc, gcc, gdb, bash, savannah.gnu.org, gzip, tar, wget, ld, fileutils, shellutils, findutils, grep, arch (version control system), emacs, hordes of documentation, the auto-tools, byonne, bison, yacc, gnupg, make, classpath, GCJ, guile, smalltalk
The Less GNU in My Linux, the Better (Score:2)
GNU is just an umbrella organization where it's convenient to have the copyrights held.
Frankly, I prefer busybox to many of the GNU commandline utilities. I despise info for it's emacsisms and wish they would just maintain man pages.
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:3, Informative)
Linux is the operating system. An OS is a bit of code responsible for the allocation of resources: CPU, RAM, disk, hardware.
The GNU tools are even the only thing in the basic operating environment, although they are a large part of what makes it so grand. The GNU project should get credit for its great work, but so too should XFree86, Postgresql, KDE (I dislike it myself, but...), nethack and so on.
Probably the best credit that can be given is to call what Red Hat, SuSE, Debian, Mandrake and friends d
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:2)
> of resources: CPU, RAM, disk, hardware
That's the definition of a kernel.
Applications written for GNU/Linux, require glibc. And they need GNU ld so that they can dynamically link with glibc. To an application, libc is the OS. You can replace the kernel, GNU has been ported to the FreeBSD kernel, applications don't care.
I agree that calling the system a "Free Software OS" is a good way to give correct attribution and make users aware of what
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:2)
Applications can be written for Linux which don't require glibc. It would be a pain, but it's quite doable. Applications can be statically linked, and not need GNU ld, or one could replace GNU ld with one's own.
The OS wasn't `complete before open source ever existed'; it's not even complete now. You'll notice that kernel development continues even today.
Re:Stallman declined to be interviewed ... (Score:2)
No idea why this other tripe was modded up instead of your post, since you're the only one making a coherent point.
Re:Stallman would not like this quote... (Score:4, Funny)
Nope... (Score:2)
Re:Stallman would not like this quote... (Score:2)
Offtopic side note: RMS seemed happy when someone claimed to use KDE/GNU/Linux.
Linus' take on issues (Score:4, Interesting)
Is it just me, or is Linus' attitude towards Linux, Microsoft, etc. one of nonchalance? It just doesn't seem that he cares one way or another as to what happens. Is this the mark of a man of utter confidence? Or, is this someone who is just relaxed to the point of almost being stoned?
Having never met him personally, I'm curious as to what people who have interacted with him in person make of his personality.
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:2, Insightful)
Personally I would be concerned if all he did was fan the flame wars...
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:4, Interesting)
Says it all, really... (Not that I've met him.)
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:3)
And what is wrong with that?
In the wide-world of things-to-care-about, is one tiny aspect of computers really worth getting that excited about?
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:2)
win? according to what rules?
for his accomplishments this "ordinary Joe" should be we
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:2)
How so? Do men in black ski masks come in the night to take them at gunpoint to the secret open source compound, where they're shackled to a workstation and made to code 'round the clock?
Yeah, some work for free (though, not all -- plenty of the people making contributions to the kernel are drawing a paycheck for doing so), but certainly nobody is 'screwed into it'.
Re:Linus' take on issues (Score:2)
Yeah, but which has better football? (rheotorical question - obvious NCAA<g>)
He looks totally stoned on the cover (Score:2)
Re:He looks totally stoned on the cover (Score:2)
Re:He looks totally stoned on the cover (Score:2)
Dude, I always eat a pot brownie (or pot muffin or pot tea) or two when I'm getting ready for a day of kernel hacking. Don't you?
Re:He looks totally stoned on the cover (Score:2)
Re:He looks totally stoned on the cover (Score:2)
Oh! That's why my support call wasn't answered. (Score:2)
I called 15 times about a bug in line 31337 in the latest release and never got a response. Why am I paying all this money for
Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:3, Informative)
Stallman refused to appear in the article unless the reporter got his terminology straight, which is reported as "Stallman insists Torvalds' work should properly be called GNU/Linux, because early contributors adapted GNU components for Linux - never mind that the Linux core is non-GNU and now approaches 6 million lines of code."
He further reports that "He obstinately rejects the term open source despite its now near universal use, preferring free software, the name he coined."
If the reporter had checked his facts just a little bit, he would have realised that GNU/Linux refers to GNU systems using the Linux kernel. Further, he would learn and that open source was coined to renounce some of the ideas behind free software. The names can never be interchangable.
The article also clearly states that while Linus started hacking on a kernel, he later wrote an entire operating system. It is quite clear that the writer actually believes this, despite being told otherwise by the actual original creator of the operating system most oftenly used with Linux. Why he chose not to check this claim baffles me.
As someone who believes that a correct retelling of history is crucial to progress, I am appalled at this blatant disregard of the truth.
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:5, Insightful)
What all the above distribute (save Debian HURD, of course) is the Linux operating system, with an operating environment consisting of an awful lot of tools, including the GNU environment. But there's a lot additional: KDE; XFree86; Apache; Postgresql; Mozilla and more. I will grant that the base operating evironment is mostly GNU: bash, GNU ls, GNU tar, GNU this & GNU that.
An operating system is just a bit of code which manages resources. Linux is an operating system; GNU HURD is an operating system; the Darwin kernel is an operating system; the Windows kernel is an operating system. Red Hat Linux is not an operating system; Debian/HURD is not an operating system; Mac OS X, despite its name, is not an operating system; Windows is not an operating system. What they all are is distributions of OSes and certain apps, particular to each, which sit atop the OS.
I'll admit, though, that I understand the FSF's frustration. It is highly annoying when people speak of Linux and really mean the wonderful GNU toolset. It's rather infuriating, and it's unfair to the GNU Project that it not get credit for all its work. But it would be just as unfair to all the other developers and projects who have contributed to making the average Linux distro so cool to simply call a distro GNU/Linux.
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:2)
I think we can also agree that Postgres and Apache are software packages that run on top of this platform. (yes these are artificial lines in the sand but I think they broadly encapsulate what we both intend)
Most of the platform is GNU. It was RMS that decided to organise the GNU project t
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:3, Insightful)
Words are defined by usage. An operating system is obviously more then a bit of code which manages resources, because the front page of the Debian website says "Debian is a free operating system (OS) for your computer", and because page 1 of "Getting Started Microsoft Windows 98" says "Welcome to the Microsoft Windows 98 operating
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:2)
What an OS is, is a matter for technical definition. Read a Computer Science textbook on OS design--you'll read about scheduling, about virtual memory, about fi
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of history (Score:2)
His work has been of great benefit to the open source community, but he doesn't contributed to it. The open source initiative simply decided to rebrand his work under their name.
> [RMS] DEMANDS freedom - as long as he can dictate what you do with it
Demands? demands from who? what terrible thing does he do to people that say "no" to him?
He can't dictate what you or an author does. If they want him to give his time,
GNU community before Linus (Score:2)
***Bzzzt*** Thanks for playing! GNU had a large and very active user community years before Linus came along. Our company had as-identical-as-possible GNU setups on SunOS, Xenix, and SCO-Unix (for servers), and OS/2 (EMX) and MS-DOS (DJGPP) (for clients and developers). Others were running GNU environments on a wide variety of platforms (AIX, HP-uchhhs, etc., etc.)
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of ... English (Score:2)
> how GNU tools are used on top of Linux
This is not the case. Applications written for GNU/Linux don't talk to the kernel, they talk to GNU libc. They can do this be cause they are dynamically linked using GNU ld.
GNU/Linux is a POSIX-compliant OS. This makes certain requirements on the kernel, libraries, and standard utilities. Most of this is handled by GNU software.
It was the GNU project that decided to make an OS. Nobody thinks it's exciting to write
Re:Horrid misrepresentaion of ... English (Score:2)
I'm not going to rename any projects I do GNU/ because they use GNU tools, and as far as I've seen nobody has suggested to do so.
If you were going to rename your project (which you're correct in saying that nobody has ever suggested), it would be <project>/GNU[/Linux], because it would indicate that your peoject was running on top of GNU, rather than the other way around. Probably pedantic, but I think
What is keep Linux from the Desktop (Score:2)
Great Article (Score:2)
Linus, you are my freaking hero.
Re:Great Article (Score:2)
Linus is wealthy beyond his wildest dreams, I'm sure & he got there by, well, just being Linus. That's a reassuring message in these troubled days. Linus impresses me as the kind of guy who, were the bottom to fall out tomorrow, would just look for another engineering job.
Re:Great Article (Score:2)
It's good advice. Until you have to eat.
Re:Great Article (Score:3, Insightful)
I put this question to you: have you ever seen a musician who was any good on the street? I've seen a few. Very few, and mostly in Europe or high-traffic areas of New York. Instead of a cup, they had a music case open. Usually it's got quite a bit of currency
Re:Great Article (Score:2)
That's a nice ideology for any given individual to hold, but sadly, it is impractical for an entire society.
Wired interview with Linus Torvalds (Score:2)
Linus boring? (Score:2, Interesting)
We couldn't have asked for a better hero.
Interviewer completely misstates FSF contributions (Score:2, Insightful)
The interviewer seems to hold a grudge against Stallman for refusing the interview and completely misstates the GNU/Linux discussion. He actually writes:
But this is bullocks
Re:Interviewer completely misstates FSF contributi (Score:2)
BTW, WNT is to VMS what IBM is to HAL.
GNU ? (Score:4, Insightful)
I couldn't image a more incorrect way to describe the GNU/Linux vs. Linux debate. could someone due a little research when writing an article? All the author would ahve to do is read ONE webpage on www.fsf.org to see how biased and wrong this is.
I doubt Linus would agree with that statement. Unles the FSF has recently changed its stance I don't believe they have ever under any circumstances asked that a piece of software written by, or overseen by Linus be called "GNU/Linux".
Classic McBride quote from the article (Score:2)
Here's my favorite quote from the article:
"We need to step back and take a look at the open source business model, which doesn't provide [private enterprises like ours] with inherent protections," SCO chief executive Darl McBride charged in August.
News flash, Darl. You need to spend more time looking at your own business model, and not everyone else's.
Weaselmancer
My favorite line (Score:2)
Stallman declined to be interviewed unless this article used his nomenclature throughout.
My letter to the author (Score:5, Interesting)
What you completely misrepresent, however, is his contribution to the operating system you refer to as "Linux." He, and others working with him (not Mr. Torvalds) developed many essential components still used in most of the free Unix-like operating systems used today, including all variants based on Linux. These components include compilers and assemblers (essential for application development), text editors, various essential utilities, and many, many more applications. These people have, however, failed so far in producing the most essential piece in a working Unix subsitute: a viable replacement for the Unix kernel. This is what Mr. Torvalds did, and that is what Linux is: a kernel.
Thus, the 6 million lines of code in the Linux kernel form only a small part of a complete Linux-based operating system. There are many other components, and a large number of them are GNU software without which the operating system would be useless. For this Mr. Stallman would like you to call the complete operating system a GNU/Linux system. Frankly, I don't think this is too much to ask. Also, please note that no one demands that you call "Torvalds' work" GNU/Linux. They simply ask that you not use the umbrella term "Linux" to refer to everything working with the Linux kernel (the only part which is Mr. Torvald's work).
You write, "Torvalds released the kernel of his operating system well before GNU produced a reliable one of its own," as if there is some kind of competition which GNU software writers lost, and about which they are now whining. In reality, Mr. Torvalds did not write his own operating system; he wrote a kernel that worked with the operating system GNU was already developing, and today we use both together.
Many disagree with Mr. Stallman's ideals, and find him to be a generally unlikable character, and you may be one of them. But to deny his significant contributions to Linux-based operating systems out of ignorance or spite is simply unacceptable journalism.
...and his response (Score:2, Interesting)
While I appreciate your taking the time to write so thoughtful a note, I respectfully disagree with your core point. It's an issue I've thought a lot about. The kernel is hardly only a small part of an OS. To me what you
Re:My letter to the author (Score:3, Interesting)
I do not like the term GNU/Linux not out of disrespect - on the contrary, the FSF has given much to the world, and for that I am most appreciative. However, I use X, PostgreSQL, Apache, and a number of other tools that use different licenses, and I am NOT about to start call it GNU/MIT/Qt
Comments I found interesting... (Score:2)
With the US legal system, it's always hard to tell what the hell is going to happen," Torvalds says. "So I can't just dismiss the lawsuit as the complete crapola I think it is."
Writer not so ept (Score:2)
1. It makes no sense to talk of choosing versions of the GPL. There are versions, but only two, and the difference has nothing to do with making money.
2. It must be news to Red Hat and everybody else that it is forbidden to amke money from selling modified versions.
Makes me wonder how much of the rest of the interview is bogus.
This article raises deep questions... (Score:2)
"His power is based on nothing more than (Score:2)
What a tenuous basis for power.
Why, that's almost like suggesting that government could derive its powers from the consent of the governed.
Linus rules (Score:2)
Too bad more religious zealots in the Linux community can't be more like him.
Re:Penus Torvalds (Score:2)
Re:Penus Torvalds (Score:2)
Re:Oh no, Karate! I'M SCARED!!!!!! (Score:2)
Maybe so. But she's still a fucking ugly dumbass who married a geek with a stupid name. So fuck you, and fuck "Tove" as well.
You know, I honestly doubt whoever wrote this has even seen Linus' wife. In truth, she does not appear in many photographs, so I had not seen her either. I always imagined her as a svelte ninja goddess.
Curious, I did a little Google research [google.com], and my personal conclusion is that there do not appear to be any glamour photos made of Tove (whereas there are many carefully grommed Li
Re:Oh no, Karate! I'M SCARED!!!!!! (Score:2)
She's not fat nor is she skinny. She's neither breathtakingly beautiful nor hideously ugly. She's just an ordinary looking woman. The article makes a big deal that Linus is also a very ordinary looking guy.
I really don't see why this makes any difference whatsoever with anything having to do with Linux.
Re:Favorite Quote (Score:2)
The article even refers to the kernel licence as "Linux GPL". Maybe it's correct in a technical because the kernel is licensed under the GPL with an additional permission grant (and some parts of the kernel do not include source code), but it's also unfair to neglect the GNU contribution so completely.
Re:Favorite Quote (Score:2)
As far as I know, every part of the stock Linux kernel includes source, it's the source distribution. I think a handful of binary firmware's (like Adaptec SCSI cards), have
Re:Torvalds does not skate board or know kung ?!? (Score:2, Funny)
Real programmer's marry kung fu.
Re:Sinclair QL (Score:2)
Please look before you leap...
The machine was based on the M68008, the lowest price representative of the Motorola's 68000 32-bit microprocessors' family [infoconex.com]
I've still got mine
Re:Sinclair QL (Score:2)
Re:Sinclair QL (Score:2)
Scary isn't it? I can remember how to use the IBM 029 card punch [ed-thelen.org] into which I entered the seven instructions on the framed printout that graces my office walls.
A machine I have not seen since 1980.
Re:Linus Torvals = too much credit. Rename kernel. (Score:3, Insightful)
Everyone who writes code for the kernel does so to improve the kernel, not satisfy their ego. The ego seekers quickly get bored or disgusted and move on. Slashdot should have a similar system if you ask me.