Linux Foundation - We'd Love to Work with Microsoft 147
johnno writes "In an interview with the Australian site pc world Jim Zemlin, the Linux Foundation's executive director, talks about the desire to interoperate with Microsoft and discusses the desktop outlook for Linux. He answers questions on the kind of legal protection Linux requires, whether anything ever come of the Microsoft protest that there's Linux code that they have patented, as well as Linux penetration on desktops and breaking Microsoft's stranglehold on the market. He also discusses Microsoft's recent move to open up their documentation, and why they'd like to work with the Redmond giant — 'We'd like to have a place where developers can come and work on making Linux more effectively interoperate with Microsoft products. And we'd like to do that in the open-source way that's not tied to any specific marketing agreement, that's not tied to any specific contract, that is an open process that can be participated in by anyone in the community,' Zemlin says."
Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:5, Interesting)
My experience is the average computer user believes MS products are the only ones available.
This is too sadly true... anyone who has worked in tech support or repair in a consumer based, Windows based environment can attest to that. The number of times an average Windows user has told me
"I clicked on the Internet and..." (umm, IE is NOT the Internet)
"I need to buy a new Windows for my ______" (umm, do you mean a computer with Windows on it?)
"So that MAC is Windows?" (no, hardware is not an OS...)
"My Windows isn't turning on - it keeps telling me 'Drive Failure'" (no, your hardware/mobo/BIOS is telling you that - your computer hasnt even started loading Windows)
"So, OpenOffice is Word?" (Ugh... no - but it is compatible for what you would need it for - and FREE.) - customer proceeds to buy a copy of Office because "that can't be true... it's not (Microsoft/Office/etc)"
"Well, someone installed Firefox for me, but I needed to get on the Internet, so I clicked the Internet button (IE again)." (IE is NOT the Internet)
Heck, many users even seem to think that Office is part of Windows (and thus many would wonder why that part of Windows stopped working in 60 days - when the trial expired - we actually had customers come into CompUSA who threatened to sue us and HP/Compaq/etc because that "part of" Windows broke, and we wouldn't fix it and told them they had to pay to get it "fixed" - no matter how many times we explained it to them or showed them the "60 Day Trial" icon). Heck, the number of people who think you cannot create a Word (compatible) document - much less any document - without Office - is astounding.
MS has been very good at equating function=some MS product - and too many users aren't tech saavy enough to understand that is not the case.
Why the parent has not yet been modded up, I dont know (well, the day is still early). This (perception) issue is definitely key to the "interoperability" issue with Linux and Windows - because even if Linux fully interoperated with Windows, the perception that a MS product is a certain task/function must still be overcome.
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MS has been very good at equating function=some MS product - and too many users aren't tech saavy enough to understand that is not the case.
I wouldn't give the credit for this to MS (at least not directly). It's just a by-product of being ubiqutious on the desktop. It's the same as calling a photocopier a Xerox machine, or saying a Zune is like an iPod manufactured by MS (heard someone say that on the radio today). Don't confuse computer illiterate users expressing things the only way they know how to, with subliminal marketing messages by MS.
Why the parent has not yet been modded up, I dont know (well, the day is still early). This (perception) issue is definitely key to the "interoperability" issue with Linux and Windows - because even if Linux fully interoperated with Windows, the perception that a MS product is a certain task/function must still be overcome.
Well -- parent wasn't that insightful ;). The perception problem exists -- this is true. But it's not
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MS has been very good at equating function=some MS product - and too many users aren't tech saavy enough to understand that is not the case.
I wouldn't give the credit for this to MS (at least not directly). It's just a by-product of being ubiqutious on the desktop. It's the same as calling a photocopier a Xerox machine, or saying a Zune is like an iPod manufactured by MS (heard someone say that on the radio today). Don't confuse computer illiterate users expressing things the only way they know how to, with subliminal marketing messages by MS.
I would... how about the "Internet" button? It's not like non-tech-savvy consumers came up with that idea on their own. Right on the Start Menu -> Internet. Or continually tying the (excellent choice of) name and phrase together of one of their Office components -> Word Document (which is what it is - a word document - which helps equate that to create a word document you need Word).
The list goes on and on... some may have been intentional... some may just have happened and MS capitalized on them.
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Heck, many users even seem to think that Office is part of Windows (and thus many would wonder why that part of Windows stopped working in 60 days - when the trial expired
A 60 day trialware version of Office? Apple ships Macs with a 30 day version. Though I have not and will not use it, I use the native Mac port of OO.org NeoOffice, I've heard that if a user initially saves a doc in the default format they lose access to all of the documents created with Office when the trial ends if they don't buy it.
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I think you are confusing peoples inability to communicte effectively rather than peoples ignorance of available OS.
Trust me, I am not. Most people have no clue what Linux, OS/2, BeOS, ReactOS, eComStation... etc are. Until recently (thanks to a plethora of commercials), most people didnt know what MacOSX was and thought it was a version of Windows - many still do. First hand experience dealing with thousands of customers in the last 3 years tells me that. I've even had customers who dont understand what Vista is... "So, Vista is Windows XP?" (seriously).
I think you are confusing yours and my and virtually any slashdo
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Wasent that the dream, to make things more compatible across platforms
Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:4, Insightful)
For me, the whole point of Free (as in freedom) Software is that Free Software is liberated from artificial constraints that prevent interoperability and restrict users from doing what they want their computers to do. The "True Goal" needs to be one where a users and developers and administrators are free to chose platforms that meet their requirements instead of being locked in to one platform because of vendor lock-in due to formats or protocols or software limitations.
While it's easy to paint Microsoft as some big giant ogre, that's not very helpful to the achieving the "True Goal." So long as the Linux Foundation doesn't allow Linux and the GNU Stack (or any other Free Software) to incur artificial limitations, any relationship with Microsoft is healthy for both.
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Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Microsoft are a convicted monopolist, you can't exactly say they play fair. The reason that they're doing so well is that most computer users are computer illiterate morons, that's all. It's basical
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Please pay attention to what is actually being deployed.
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Or, you could just post relevant information to the context of the story (which I guess the OP was) and just let the meta-moderators deal with it.
When I am weak (Score:1)
What about when you're neither?
Re:When I am weak (Score:5, Funny)
What about when you're neither?
When you're neither, where should you compromise?
When you're both, when should you compromise?
And finally, when you're both and neither, you shouldn't ever not uncompromise.
I'm sorry, but it just sounds like giving in. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'm sorry, but it just sounds like giving in. (Score:4, Insightful)
Better interoperatibility will benefit Linux hugely. Where there used to be just one choice, Windows, there could be more.
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Yes it is the 800 lbs gorilla. Now if it on your side or see you as a threat can make you life so much easier or a living hell. Hating Microsoft isn't a
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I hate Windows because it's a massive bloated kludge, not for any ideological reasons - I have had to develop for Windows too much over the past decade to see it any other way.
I like Linux because it's lean, elegant and relatively standa
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Even if windows vista is a flop, it does include innovative technologies. When is the last time
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Microsoft wanting to cooperate? (Score:2)
Ballmer threatens patent litigation, attempts to divide (successfully) big swaths of the FOSS development community by granting *bogus* patent protection (in which the suckers pay protection money to the industry's Don Corleone, or sell themselves to the only bidder), not happy with that they keep violating competition rules in the EU to the point when they are fined record amounts of money and *forced* to play nice with some FOSS developers, whil
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However don't expect MS to return the love. MS use the inability to interoperate as their major business tool. So may desires to switch organisations from MS to Linux end due to "Well we'd like to change to Linux but we have to use application X with only works on XP". This is a huge barrier to competition.
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Microsoft really hasn't shown any signs of innovation in a long time [...]
This statement is meaningless unless you define what you mean by "innovation".
Remember what they did with TCP/IP early on? Made their own stack that didn't quiet work with anything else but said it wasn't their fault.
No. Can you elaborate ?
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No car analogy, but.... (Score:3, Funny)
I'm always suspicious ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Although they may want to work with their competitor, they might not want to do it on anything EXCEPT their terms, and I get the feeling that this is the same situation - They say "we'd love to work with you", but when the other party doesn't agree to their terms, it is the other party that looks like they're refusing to co-operate.
Re:I'm always suspicious ... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure the FSF would be delighted to work with Microsoft -- if Microsoft released all of its source under the GPL. Of course, everyone knows that its unreasonable to believe Microsoft would accept these terms in our lifetime, so it would do no good to announce this.
This shows to have PR value, an offer has to have something that might interest MS. It must be something in which MS could recognize its own enlightened self-interest. It's possible to imagine this happening fairly soon, if there are significant developments that MS cannot profitably fight or coopt. If we imagine sub-$400 linux laptops taking off big time, it might turn defending that part of MS's monopoly from a cash cow into a cash sink. That kind of thing might signal a smart time for MS to reposition itself.
It'd be momentous, to be sure. But not impossible to imagine.
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Um, no, wait...
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I'm sure the FSF would be delighted to work with Microsoft -- if Microsoft released all of its source under the GPL. Of course, everyone knows that its unreasonable to believe Microsoft would accept these terms in our lifetime, so it would do no good to announce this.
Except this is the Linux Foundation, which is where Linus Torvalds works now. And they are not quite as religious as the FSF about having every little thing free software. Which is part of why GPLv3 was not adopted for the kernel.
According t
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The letter of the law vs the intent (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The letter of the law vs the intent (Score:4, Insightful)
Make the stand. (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me give you an example. Warcraft II vs. Stratagus.
There was a group of people that wanted to play Warcraft II on Linux, so they made tools to extract the data of the Warcraft II DOS CDs and use it on the hard disk to play Warcraft II. At first, this was called 'Freecraft', later called Stratagus that made significant advacements in Warcraft II including:
Support for 16 Players rather than just 8
Support for Human/Orc joint AI.
Support for TCP/IP
correcting several gameplay bugs and sound bugs
No CD Copy protection
Actual uses for the Runestone and the Dark Portal (Dark Portal worked like a one way Starcraft Nydus Canal
Superior AI.
Linux technology must be flat out BETTER than anything a Windowsd technology can produce. Compare Samba 3.0 to Windows NT 4.0
- Support for LDAP
No stupid limits on Trust Hirearchies
Support for Kerberos
Support for SMB without NMB.
We can't team up with MS, we must Flatten it, or they will flatten us. Thats just the way it is.
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Furthermore, your conclusion ("Linux technology must be flat out BETTER than anything a Windowsd technology can produce.") based on Stratagus is really bad, since WC2 from which it is based is old software. That's like saying that old software is not as good as newer software. What a shock! I'm sure if Blizzard
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Re:Make the stand. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Make the stand. (Score:5, Informative)
Your argument sort of held water in the first half, but the last bit was an obvious spin to help the data conform to your views.
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Re:Make the stand. (Score:4, Insightful)
Desktop Search
Composite Window Managers
User Access Control
Kerberos
All were available in OSX and Linux before Vista
Re:Make the stand. (Score:5, Insightful)
Multiple Virtual Desktops
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Well it makes sense in a way. Samba 3.x is effectively NT4 with a whole lot of extra stuff. Samba 3.x isn't Active Directory, although it does fit into an existing Active Directory network better than NT4 because of all those extras.
So Samba 3.x is a better more modern NT4 than NT4 (which was I think his point). But until Samba 4.0 that is as far as it goes.
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So Samba 3.x is a better more modern NT4 than NT4 (which was I think his point).
So are Windows 2000 and 2003, so the point would be...?
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Only if you missed the actual point. The point was based on Windows 2000 and 2003 DCs not being able to (by themselves) set up an NT4 domain - they have moved on to something fundamentally different.
So although you'd be correct to say that they are a better Windows Server OS than NT4, they aren't really a better NT4 implementation in the same way Samba 3.x is. You can't call Samba 3.x an Windows 200x DC implementation at all - hence the reason why the earlier poster compared (ap
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Supporting the existing non standard formats is good for everyone on the short term, on the long term everyone loose. Only the owner of the format might win as he owns the existing installed base and decides when a version is obsolete and when you have to install the new one, for
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This is a major reason for the changes in the GPL for GPLv3, and it's a problem that the Apache, MIT, and BSD licenses have not addressed. We need to keep an eye on this.
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That the free software world can copy a successful closed source project, copy almost all of the significant or hard work, and then make some improvements upon it?
I'm not sure I'd point to that with much in the way of pride. It's about on the level of copying War and Peace, fixing a few spelling or grammar errors, and calling it an accomplishment.
Dearest Jim Zemlin: (Score:5, Informative)
and Jim please ignore the IP infringement FUD, unless microsoft coughs up some tangible proof they have nothing but FUD...
Year of the Linux Desktop! (Score:1, Troll)
Sorry, yes, this is finally the year of the linux desktop!
Re:Year of the Linux Desktop! (Score:4, Interesting)
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Because if too many people use it you will have to install anti-virus!
Hmm... [apple.com]
Two MILLION in three months? That's one hella botnet! So, how many more macs do they have to sell before the Mac virus that Norton has been warning about for the last ten years actually gets relea
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Sorry, I can't take that claim seriously. Who knows, maybe 2009 will finally be the year of the Linux desktop, but I am not holding my breath.
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Personally, I would have modded it flamebait rather than troll, but I've got better things to spend my mod points on.
Well, that's half the job done. (Score:3, Insightful)
One-Page Article Link (Score:2)
Now I'm back to RingTFA before posting. (Yes, I'm new here).
Microsoft Agrees (Score:5, Funny)
In related news: (Score:5, Funny)
Also... (Score:2, Funny)
And collectively, around Microsoft, (Score:2)
Of course. (Score:3, Insightful)
So of course they want to interoperate with Microsoft.
And MS seems to be the only ones being a problem here.
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'We'd like to have a place where developers can c (Score:2)
Yeah, and people in hell would like a glass of ice water and some air conditioning too.
Difference in attitude (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft: Yeah ... that's what we've been trying to prevent!
Good Luck With That (Score:3, Interesting)
But since that's what the summary says, that's what everybody will be talking about, so:
I'd love to see MS bury the hatchet as much as anybody. But where's the Windows Genuine Advantage in that?
MS is obviously not going to give away filesystem specs or the other interoperability roadblocks that collectively create the best argument to businesses for continuing to pay the Windows tax. So the most collaboration we might see is in getting MS Office to run on Linux. In other words, if Redmond bit at all, it'd be at the chance to stomp on OpenOffice to prevent future competition in its core business desktop market.
***
Anyway, besides that, the article was surprisingly content-free. Yes, there are interesting synergies between extending battery life on mobile devices vs. saving energy in the data center. We get that, no need to repeat.
The interviewee promotes this thesis: these synergies are possible primarily through the collaborative Linux environment, which is Linux's great strength. However, I would argue that those synergies are equally possible in closed-source shops, but it's just that management has to learn to listen to them differently -- and that that is only a matter of time. For instance, I used to work in a company that made document-management databases for law firms. I think there's a huge market for (appropriately crippled and cheapened) versions of this product in the private desktop market, for promoting "paperless offices" in non-law businesses, and for aiding academic research: three huge markets that would be very happy to get rid of their physical files and add markup and search if you have enterprise-reliability document management database software. Nobody listened, though; in an Open Source environment, I could've just forked and
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Can anyone explain to me what is a synergy?
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1. The interaction of two or more agents or forces so that their combined effect is greater than the sum of their individual effects.
2. Cooperative interaction among groups, especially among the acquired subsidiaries or merged parts of a corporation, that creates an enhanced combined effect.
As I'm using it here, "serendipity" would probably be a better word, or "happy coincidence" -- instead of two forces working together to produce more than the sum of their parts, it's one force that t
To quote Princess Leia... (Score:1, Insightful)
There's a reason articles like this invariably get tagged with the above. Microsoft has a proven history of sticking a knife in just about any back it can reach. At the moment, MS can't touch Linux, since Linux operates in a way that MS just doesn't understand (ie it isn't a business) and doesn't value the same things as Microsoft ($$$$$). However the second Linux gets close enough to MS, to work with it, take lessons from it, to play by its rules- that's when MS will have the power to bring Linux
Can somebody splain me (Score:1)
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Leia said "It's a trap" long before Admiral Ackbar did. When she was being dragged away in Cloud City and trying to warn Luke.
What is the market share threshold? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm wondering at what point MS will honestly start to interoperate. For Internet Explorer, they didn't start to make meaningful changes until they started losing market share to Firefox and Safari. Now, we're hearing about IE8 being honest to goodness standards compliant. (and they actually sound like they mean it - not holding my breath, but I remain hopeful)
Is the interoperability threshold 80% market share?
Whatever the number is, I don't expect to see any significant changes until MS starts losing customers. Given their resources, they should have been able to make a better browser in 2002, rather than now in 2008.
Let's get real already (Score:3, Informative)
Without Windows, Linux desktop would have no market penetration target, and without Linux Windows would stagnate.
I think any IT professional that thinks either one paradigm should be 100% prevalent over the other needs to take a good look at themselves and ask how "professional" they really think they are.
Interoperability is good, and personally I thank god neither MS or OSS will ever be 100% dominant in IT (each for their own reasons).
Just my 2 cents.
Observations and critique (Score:2, Interesting)
So you're starting to see OEMs pre-ship Linux for the first time [...] why are they doing that? [...] Is it because Linux is more functional than it's ever been? [...] yes, it is more functional. But that functionality combined with the economics [...]. [lots of ...] And so when companies like Dell or Asus or Lenovo or all these companies look at those profit margins, they say, "Why wouldn't I just create my own operating system and ship it with the device?
Interesting. He argues for linux based primarily on price, and from the seller's viewpoint. Sure, some of the savings is (presumably) passed on to the consumer, but I miss a good argument for why the consumer should use it. He could have said "it does the same job for a lower price", which is a very convincing argument in my book (and to some extent also valid). It's not a very sexy argument, though, but I won't be demanding everything.
InfoWorld: But Windows is still on 98, 99 per cent of PC desktops anyway, so do you think that number or that percentage will decrease?
Zemlin: Yes. Yes, I think it will actually.
As an extention of my previous c
Sightings of Flying Pigs in N/W USA? (Score:1)
Or should I just order whatever LF are having?
--
E
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The Scorpion and the frog (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux foundation: Please shut up. (Score:3)
Sorry but this is about the second time the Linux foundation issues a terrible statement like that, I still got a grudge after the "Linux users must respect Microsoft even though Microsoft certainly doesn't respect Linux users" one.
What's worse is that this is a smoke screen, since such Linux foundation statement will probably be echoed much more than SFLC's recent statement about the MS' (bogus) patent promise [softwarefreedom.org] .
Sure. We'd love to cut our own throats, too. (Score:2)
And cooperation with a company that is famous for reneging on its own "cooperative" deals, in order to kill the competition, is actually a GOOD idea. Yeah.
And let's all line up to walk off this here cliff, too.
I wonder how much he was paid under the table to make this suggestion.
Linux Foundation is a Scam (Score:2)
Of course it would love to work with Microsoft. I'm sure the Pepzi Organization would love to work with the Coca-Cola Corporation, too.
Are you joking? (Score:2)
http://www.linux-foundation.org/en/Members [linux-foundation.org]
You can call it whatever you want, but not a scam for sure.
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I got the Linux Foundation [wikipedia.org] confused with the Australian gambit to trademark "Linux" [zdnet.co.uk] and then charge anyone using the term money.
Thanks for setting me straight.
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I'm honestly worried that MS might use this as a chance to slip an infringing landmine into the linux source code.
Don't be. The rules for inclusion of source into Linux state: (from Documentation/SubmittingPatches)
The sign-off is a simple line at the end of the explanation for the
patch, which certifies that you wrote it or otherwise have the right to
pass it on as a open-source patch. The rules are pretty simple: if you
can certify the below:
Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1
By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
(a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I
have the right to submit it under the open source license
indicated in the file; or
(b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best
of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source
license and I have the right under that license to submit that
work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part
by me, under the same open source license (unless I am
permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated
in the file; or
(c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other
person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified
it.
(d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution
are public and that a record of the contribution (including all
personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is
maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with
this project or the open source license(s) involved.
then you just add a line saying
Signed-off-by: Random J Developer
using your real name (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions.)
Given Linus' current email address and the language of the above, I would presume that the Linux Foundation wrote it.