Alan Cox Given Lifetime Achievement Award 89
sebFlyte writes "This year's LinuxWorld awards in London were given out last night, including a lifetime achievement award to sometime maintainer of the Linux kernel and general open-source evangelist Alan Cox. Awards voted for by the user community also went to Ubuntu, for best distro and IBM for best corporate contribution to open source. He also chose to poke fun at the gathered hordes of open source coders saying "I do like all the dot-orgs... They have everything you need in life except soap.""
What are you going to do now? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What are you going to do now? (Score:2)
Re:Good for Him (Score:1)
Re:Good for Him (Score:1)
Re:Good for Him (Score:1)
Congratulations! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Congratulations! (Score:2)
What does he do now? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What does he do now? (Score:1, Insightful)
Too soon perhaps ? (Score:5, Insightful)
is this some offensive hint to alan ?
anyway, as from my personal experience, he might seem really mean sometimes, but eventually it always turns out that he has good motives to do and say what he does do or say. and did i forget to mention that this dude knows how to code ?
i hope they aren't "carrying him out of the door with an applause", cause i think we still need him, even if he is under the hat of a big red evil company.
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:2)
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:1)
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:2)
Hey now. ESR maintained ncurses for a while. You know not everyone can contribute as usefully at the guy who posts screenshots of new Family Guy episodes on Wikipedia.
Re:Too soon perhaps ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Lifetime achievement awards are given to people towards the END of their lifetime, not in the middle of it. The reason is that people still have a lot to contribute in their lifetime, and giving such an award to someone in the middle basically snubs what they may do afterwards.
And, for the record, giving someone TWO lifetime achievement awards for the same thing is pretty stupid, so any work done after such an award will likely go unrecognized, at least by th
Re:Who needs SOAP? We've got CORBA!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:5, Interesting)
Note that I am just overly curious...
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:3, Funny)
At first I was thinking Mr Leech. But, as soon as I typed it in, all I could think of was the song too. At least the Macarena has dropped out of my head...
ARGH! Why did you have to say that word? (Score:1, Funny)
ARGH! ARGH! A-ah! A-a-aH, Macarena!
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:2)
Transmeta was crazily lucrative to work for in the time before the bubble burst. Second hand story, disclaimers apply, but a friend of a friend apparently made about a million bucks off stock options he received as a summer intern. Not unreasonable given the curve their stock w
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:4, Interesting)
On the other hand, I've seen Stallman in the supermarket a few times and while he can at least pay for food, he certainly doesn't appear to be living too large. I figured he'd go up to the cashier and demand the source code to the cash register firmware, but no...
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:2, Informative)
On the other hand, he is a recipient of the MacArthur Award (aka The Genius Grant) and the Takeda Award [gnu.org] which means he has a nice chunk of change socked away somewhere.
Re:Lifestyles of the rich and famous (Score:2)
Soap and... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Soap and... (Score:1)
Re:Soap and... (Score:1)
Re:Soap and... (Score:2)
Re:Soap and... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Soap and... (Score:1)
...else you get the hose again!
Re:Soap and...(ever? ever?) (Score:5, Funny)
Can you forget something which you have never known?
Forget them? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Soap and... (Score:1)
The "he" joking in the summary (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The "he" joking in the summary (Score:1)
Yep; IBM actually told a joke about a hooker and a Bishop.
The award comes too late (Score:1)
Re:The award comes too late (Score:3, Interesting)
I credit Alan for making the kernel stable during the 2.0 days and earlier. After he left Linux has gone downhill in stability. What is he up too?
I assume he was still in school.
Alan, Linux needs you. Come back
Re:The award comes too late (Score:2)
Re:The award comes too late (Score:1)
Fascinating to listen to on a wide range of subjects :-)
Re:The award comes too late (Score:1)
Tom.
OK, I'm having a little trouble here (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OK, I'm having a little trouble here (Score:1)
Soap? (Score:1)
Hey, I bathe every month whether I need it or not! The nerve of some people!
Re:Soap? (Score:3, Funny)
I have to do it... (Score:3, Insightful)
Congrats Alan!
dot-org joke? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:dot-org joke? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Geek Lifetime Achievement is awarded when.... (Score:1)
That explains why Linus always comes off as too uptight to have really started all this... no beard.
Maybe that's why the whole Linux trademark fiasco is going on... Linus is finally demonstrating to the world that he really doesn't have a beard.
(FWIW, I get regular comments on my beard making it look like I'm one of the ZZTop guys, so I guess that makes me a big geek. heheheh)
Correction (Score:2)
Alan Cox didn't say that. The comedian compere did.
no SOAP? (Score:1)
way to go! (Score:1)
_A_ (Score:2)
Judging Awards (Score:1)
I was one of the judges on the awards last night. I have to say that it was a pretty interesting set of awards we had to give out - and I'm glad that Alan got reconised for the work he has done over the last more than a decade. It was good also to see some of the reacton from those receiving - Mark Shuttleworth was especially cool thanking Debian for the hard work which fueled the Ubuntu project.
Those who were there might have noticed I had them play some Runrig when Alan received his award (since
Congratulations to Alan Cox (Score:5, Informative)
1. For being insturmental in getting linux to run on 68k Macintoshes.
( actually, this makes him closer to a saint, but I digress..)
2. For producing the first 64-bit port of linux.
3. For maintaining the 64-bit port of linux.
4. For being outspoken about the quality of the programming for the linux kernel. ( Ah ya, another sainthood type thing...)
5. For promoting and proveying software at levels of quality far above normal industry standards.
6. For contributing a large amount of time and energy to the development of the linux kernel.
So...basically, Alan Cox is a god. Id like to nominate him for a MacArthur Grant.
Killmofasta
Re:Congratulations to Alan Cox (Score:2)
Only trouble is, one has to be at least a US citizen to get one. I agree that he qualifies on all the other criteria.
Note to self, Make a few hundred million and set up an "International Macarthur Grant" equivalent.