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RIP: Leonard Zubkoff

UnidentifiedCoward writes "LWN.net has a link to a blurb at KTVA, "Alaska State Troopers have recovered the bodies and released the names of two men killed late last week in a helicopter crash in Southeast. They are 38-year-old David Zampino of Fairbanks and 45-year-old Leonard Zubkoff of Crystal Bay, Nevada." Mr. Zubkoff was a linux kernel developer and the maintainer of BusLogic and DAC960 projects." Leonard was a hell of a nice guy and will be missed.

8 of 345 comments (clear)

  1. Once again... by A+Clockwork+Orange · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another of the world's many reminders of how fragile life is.

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    Fare thee well, poor comment. For thou hast been cast out amongst wolves.
  2. The Amiga. by Troy+H+Parker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As is often said when an Amiga user passes away, "The Amiga, it will outlive all of us."

  3. Two people died by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Leonard was a hell of a nice guy and will be missed.

    And David?

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    "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    1. Re:Two people died by matt-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And David?

      Well, if you knew him, you should say something. If you didn't, it's kind of hard to say anything but "I'm sure David was a great guy too!" or "Any friend of a kernel developer is a friend of mine!"

    2. Re:Two people died by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Story:

      Leonard was a hell of a nice guy and will be missed.

      Reply:
      And David?

      Of course, but not on slashdot ;)

      Lets face it, Leonard was a part of our community, David to my knowledge was not. His communities will miss him too, but not on slashdot.

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  4. Obit topic by autopr0n · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot seems to run a lot of obituaries. Perhaps there should be a topic for it.

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  5. One to Emulate by QuantumWeasel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I will never forget how it felt to install Mr. Zubkoff's BusLogic drivers in a 2.0.8 kernel for the first time. Back then, the drivers hadn't yet made their way into Linus' tree. As a veteran of rolling my own kernel, having built X and gotten it up when that was still an accomplishment, and having bled on libc #defines, I settled in for major pain. But Mr. Zubkoff's driver dropped right in. Like butter. The nost seamless thing I'd ever seen. He will be missed, not only for great drivers but also for providing a model of how the Linux community could approach initially reluctant vendors for register-level APIs. Here's to you, sir!

  6. Power of Open Source (not flamebait or troll) by powerlinekid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all my condolances to the loved ones of David and Leonard. I never knew either, but from the glowing comments I've read... I wish I had. Unfortunately shit happens. Its part of life. However even though Leonard has passed on, his legacy will be the code he has contributed to linux. From what I've understand that seems to be some extensive work on the scsi system which is no small task in its self. All of this makes me wonder, because of the freedom of his code... his work will live on through others, would this be the case in "non-OS" software? Say Company M has a programmer P who is chiefly responsible for widget W. Now say programmer P passes on and besides maybe a few people who understand the code, who works on W? But if P's work was done to be scrutinized by the masses, that work would continue on. I believe this is one important reason why information should be free. If something happens to the creator, their work can continue on if it has value to someone. It makes me wonder how many people had brilliant ideas, but closely guarded them to the point that they died with them.

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