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Stallman, Torvalds, Sakamura win Takeda Prize

hal_mit writes: "Richard Stallman, Linus Torvalds, and Ken Sakamura have been jointly awarded the first annual Takeda Foundation Prize, for "The origination and the advancement of open development models for system software - open architecture, free software and open source software". This is a major new recognition of the social value of free software and open source."

10 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. Richard will be pleased by sllort · · Score: 5, Funny

    RMS should be pretty happy about this. Note that they listed him above Linus. That's Stallman/Torvalds.

  2. Oh man... by btlzu2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Guess who's going to reject it because it's not called the GNU/Takeda Foundation prize!

    --
    Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead.
    1. Re:Oh man... by sydb · · Score: 5, Funny

      And guess who's going to say "I really don't care about this award, I just want to code..."

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
  3. Open Source Award by MacGabhain · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would like to introduce the MacGabhain Open Source Award. You may award it to anyone else you like, so long as you don't restrict them from awarding it to others. You may modify the award in any way you like, so long as that award may also be awarded by anyone else to anyone else. You must include the following statement in any issuance of this award:

    This award is or includes the MacGabhain Open Source Award. You may grant this award, either in its current form or in any modified form, to anyone provided you allow them to grant this award to anyone else and you include this statement in any granting of the award.

  4. And the swag is... by sphealey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    823,000 USD at today's interbank rate, per Oanda.com. Not too shabby.

    Was recently reading a biography of Enrico Fermi. The cash he received from the Nobel prize, plus the jewlery his wife was able to take with her to Sweden for the prize ceremony, allowed them to escape Italy to the US (his wife was Jewish).

    sPh

  5. Torn from the pages of DUH magazine.... by Unknown+Bovine+Group · · Score: 5, Funny

    Stallman and Torvalds win an Open Source Prize? Shocking! Also in this issue of Duh:

    Jim Henson posthumously awarded the Kermit the Frog Award for Puppetry

    McDonalds awarded the Ray Crock award for tastiest burger joint with a Clown Themed Mascot

    Bill Gates awarded the MCSE lobby's Man of the Millennium, Ballmer heartbroken

    --
    m00.
    1. Re:Torn from the pages of DUH magazine.... by doconnor · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... The next think you know they'll be giving the Nobel Peace Prize to the Secretary General of the United Nations.

  6. Remember the old Star Trek history rule? by po8 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Remember how, in Star Trek, it was/is the rule when citing history to give 3 sources: two of which you've heard of, and one which is apparently post 21st-century? You know, Kirk will talk about e.g. ``defenders of freedom like Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Ankuba of Sirius 43.''

    Meaning no disrespect to the fine work of any of the recipients of this generous prize, but...

  7. You Writeda Code. by Darth+RadaR · · Score: 5, Funny

    You Takeda Prize.
    \(^_^)/

    --
    /*drunk.. fix later*/
  8. Re:Seriously. by JabberWokky · · Score: 5, Informative
    MS is shady at best. However, most people on this board probably would be without jobs had it not been for W95.

    Speak for yourself. I was happily doing consulting working in 1992, and since then I have been doing nothing but computer jobs. Previous to that, however, I sold applications for the Apple ][ (an image editor named Digital Palette and a text editor named Ion (which had support for Epson print codes!)). That was well before Windows 95.

    There was enough good stuff coming out so that, had Microsoft been absent, we would still be more or less in the same place we are now.

    That really brought the PC to the home consumer, and the Internet to the masses.

    Wow. You have no historical perspective (or you've been smoking MS Press Releases). Was Win95 your first OS? Did you miss the fact that the WinSock and Netscape programs that brought the Internet to that era's users was not part of Win95 (Know what Tucows stands for)? Hell, I was working in an ISP in 1995, and we put out tons of install disks loaded with 16 bit software.

    it's my opinion.

    It really sounds like the opinion of someone whose computer experience began fairly recently. That's no *bad*, just keep in mind that perspective on many of these "absolutes" and "beginnings" is important. I almost choked on coffee when someone first said in a meeting, "Well, as the old saying goes, nobody ever got fired for buying Microsoft". That dosen't mean it wasn't true - at the time. And the fact that it's been through iterations just indicates that there are iterations yet to come.

    --
    Evan

    --
    "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien