Alan Cox on How Linux Can Survive Without Linus 25
zigam writes "In another great episode of LUGRadio, kernel hacker Alan Cox talks about the kernel development process, DRM, and how Linux can survive without Linus. The usual disclaimer about British gits swearing and ranting about open source applies."
Cursing (Score:5, Funny)
"You pint fisted wank stain!"
That's gold...
Re:Cursing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cursing (Score:1)
Re:Cursing (Score:4, Funny)
Python did it best:
Shut your festering gob, you tit! Your type really makes me puke, you vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous pervert! [wavsource.com]
Re:Cursing (Score:2)
(If you don't get the Spaced reference, then can I point out that it is a award-winning sitcom, one of whose main characters works in a comic book shop. What are you doing not buying the DVD right now?)
Hmmm (Score:3, Funny)
Too much nervous laughter for my tastes.
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Umm....
A transcript... a transcript... (Score:4, Insightful)
well at least the download's fast from the mirror I've chosen... :)
One man software (Score:4, Insightful)
You remeber what happened whith Slackware when Patrick Volkerding was really sick? What would have happened if he had abandoned the maintainance of his distribution?
I think that the history of open source is far too short to answer these questions, but, sooner or later, all the pioneers of open source will retire.
I hope they will realize when the time will come to gradually drop their responsibilities and their influence. I also think that Richard Stallman is a good example, he has already started to retire from active development and even his leadership is becoming less practical and (even) more ideological.
Re:One man software (Score:5, Informative)
No matter who you are, these transitions are never easy. Linus has set Linux up better than most projects, but still there is by design one central kernel (a very good design by the way, so far, for now, and for quite a while to come).
Re:One man software (Score:2)
Re:One man software (Score:1)
Without Linus? (Score:4, Funny)
Why, does he have something sinister planned?
Re:Without Linus? (Score:2)
for Linus, but you can believe that one or two
aphabet soup government agencies (and at least
one mega-corporation (cough*MSFTcough*)) might
have such contingency plans.
No single corporation, that draws in over $30B
USD per year, has more to fear from the F/OSS
movement than MSFT. And as one of the bigger
IT players in the USA's GNP (and with potential
stranglehold on the fortune & future of many
foreign governments & corporations), America's
current regime
What If Linus Torvalds Gets Hit By A Bus? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What If Linus Torvalds Gets Hit By A Bus? (Score:2)
Of course it can survive... (Score:1)
I don't let this worry me. If it is worth surviving, those who use it will cause it to by demand because so
But.... (Score:2)
You need to bear in mind that now that our coal and steel industries are near non-existent, manufacturing exports are shafted by the high value of the pound and Britain is governed by a group of people for whom mediocrity is a desirable state, swearing and ranting is one of the few sports we British gits can compete in at a world class level.
That and our top class cynicism skills are the few things we have to comf