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BBC Interviews Linus Torvalds

chrisseaton writes "The BBC has an interview with Linus Torvalds. It's a little thin, but good to see something like this in a decent mainstream news source."

210 comments

  1. Wonderful by chainrust · · Score: 0, Troll

    Finally, mainstream news is recognizing the *real* god of computers, not good ol' Billy Gates.

    1. Re:Wonderful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's odd. I read the whole thing and didn't see one mention of Knuth.

    2. Re:Wonderful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WARNING

      The parent poster considers himself a "troll"! Just check his user info!

      MOD DOWN WITH EXTREME PREJUDICE

    3. Re:Wonderful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knuth? Wtf? Think Turing, Church. Or maybe Von Neumann.

    4. Re:Wonderful by xingix · · Score: 0

      Linus Torvalds a god? What about his old mentor, Andrew Tanenbaum, whose Minix code Linus used to developed Linux? Let's put things into perspective, here.

      --

      Confucious says: Man who runs behind car gets exhausted.

      // jeku.com

    5. Re:Wonderful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was a joke. Relax.

    6. Re:Wonderful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Finally, mainstream news is recognizing the *real* god of computers"

      Really? that was an article about linus: no mention of RMS anywhere...

    7. Re:Wonderful by elveu · · Score: 1

      well it's becease of this that you can't say that any one person is a god, people will take off from where someone else left off. heck you could take it back to the incention of the comptuer.

    8. Re:Wonderful by machine+of+god · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know I'm sick of hearing about how Bill is the God of computers. Only not.

    9. Re:Wonderful by r0t · · Score: 1

      It's European, that is why... CNN needs to do some coverage so it becomes mainstream in America.

    10. Re:Wonderful by Noodlenose · · Score: 1
      Finally, mainstream news is recognizing the *real* god of computers

      Steve Jobs?

  2. Good for him by Inthewire · · Score: 1

    It's nice to see him getting some long-awaited press. No more toiling in the shadows for Mr. Torvalds.

    --


    Writers imply. Readers infer.
  3. You are now under my penguin control by DarkHelmet · · Score: 2, Funny
    Linus Torvalds has revealed he is happy to be the poster boy for the anti-Microsoft campaign but would not know what to say if he met Bill Gates.

    How about...

    You are now under my penguin control

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:You are now under my penguin control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a waste of 2 minutes.
      And what the hell is FOTP?

    2. Re:You are now under my penguin control by minkwe · · Score: 1

      How about:

      All your customers are belong to me!

      --
      "Fighting terrorists with millitary might is like killing a mosquitor on your Dad's forehead with a rifle."
    3. Re:You are now under my penguin control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had bowel movements that were more interesting than that cartoon.

  4. see & hear the interview by Alain+Williams · · Score: 4, Informative

    Visit:

    http://www.bbcworld.com/content/template_clickon li ne.asp?pageid=666&co_pageid=3

    realplayer is needed to see this.

    1. Re:see & hear the interview by hexxx · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Considering that the link does not work, I find it strange that this is intersting...

      --
      IVAN Nethack is not the king anymore.
    2. Re:see & hear the interview by Truckle · · Score: 2, Informative

      Link: Here.

    3. Re:see & hear the interview by SmileyBen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ...the irony being that this appears to be only in Windows Media format!

    4. Re:see & hear the interview by oever · · Score: 2

      Why preach to the converted?

      --
      DNA is the ultimate spaghetti code.
    5. Re:see & hear the interview by Secure42 · · Score: 1

      I can at least hear it under Linux using avifile
      is there any way of saving it and record it in a different format?
      Not taking into account legal considerations :)

    6. Re:see & hear the interview by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the 'pageid=666' in the URL. Omens abound...

      --Dan

    7. Re:see & hear the interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why bother? Just try Crossover

    8. Re:see & hear the interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, no FreeBSD support =(
      and avifile won't compile ='(

  5. Quote ... by uq1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    "No-one has ever called me a cool dude. I'm somewhere between geek and normal," he said.

    Linus, You're a cool dude.

    1. Re:Quote ... by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Well, I think he's cool too, but I think if you are cool at slashdot, your probably a geek.

      But seriously, the fact that Linus handles himself so well when talking to the 'normals' is a huge plus to the community. Thanks, Linus, keep up the good work.

    2. Re:Quote ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No probably, DEFINATELY. I am definately a geek it's not funny.

      I also believe Linus is one aswell.

      But thats good, means we're both cool dudes. /me stops drinking the beer cause he's rambling.

    3. Re:Quote ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No, sir. I can't claim to have known him. I once had the honour to shake his hand in Damascus."

    4. Re:Quote ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hi!

      Yes, Linus is a cool dude but you should remember that the FSF is full of cool dudes and that GNU Hurd is ready for use! Remember you have a responsibility to yourself and the rest of humanity to choose Free over mere "Open Source" where possible - do the right thing for the future of computing.

      So thanks Linus, for helping to develop GNU/Linux. But please consider GNU Hurd! Futrure generations will thank you.

      Cheers,
      GNU/Wolfgang

    5. Re:Quote ... by Xpilot · · Score: 3, Funny

      Linus handles himself so well when talking to the 'normals'

      I guess you'll only find a sentence like this on slashdot. And, *shudder*, it makes sense too.

      --
      "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
    6. Re:Quote ... by zenyu · · Score: 2


      As long as you are aware of it, it's not a problem. I had to spend three months in Florida to learn that "Car people" was not even recognized as a derogatory term in many places outside Manhattan. I'm still not sure that bit of self awareness was worth it.

    7. Re:Quote ... by Perdo · · Score: 2

      Weird, searching for "Linus is cool" reveals it has been said 70 to 80 times, as early as 1995.

      The only problem is it is usually said to preface a slam to Linus.

      Like, "don't flame me because I think Linus is cool but, he eats dryer lint when he codes blah blah blah..."

      The same can be said of "Apple is cool".

      Like the people who say it can avoid the steely gaze of the zealots by starting out saying something nice :)

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    8. Re:Quote ... by kasperd · · Score: 1

      So thanks Linus, for helping to develop GNU/Linux. But please consider GNU Hurd! Futrure generations will thank you.

      Considering GNU Hurd is a good idea, not because of license issues, but because we shouldn't see Linux as the only option.

      Both kernels are released under the GNU GPL, and thus the choice should not be based on the license but the technical differences. Consider the options and choose the kernel that is technically best for your purpose.

      Believing that there can be only one kernel is bad no matter which kernel you have in mind.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    9. Re:Quote ... by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      Agreed. I'm very interested in HURD, but not because of licencing (well, at least not compared with Linux or *BSD). Lately, I've been coming up with ideas of what a capabilities a future OS should have, and when I tell people, I keep getting told "Hurd can do that". It's fascinating.

      Granted, I never actually got Hurd running for very long yet. I can't remember why. I think I needed the extra hard disk space for something else, so I wiped it.

  6. respectful by powerline22 · · Score: 0

    I have always respected the BBC for their reporting. This just completely proves it to me. I also like that there is a complete interview that is recent somewhere, as opposed to snippets of conversation from a year or two ago. This stuff is just mind-boggling.

  7. i fail to see... by bsDaemon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...how this is vaugly interesting at all? the article really lacks content. it is as if they could have interviewd Paul Alan and went off on a tangent about golf w/ some random quotes about Altair BASIC. Except Paul Alan interests me more for some sick, twisted reason

    1. Re:i fail to see... by ninthwave · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think the idea of BBC snippets like this is that if you are an average reader, no knowldege of Linux or maybe computers in general, it gives you a brief characterisation on people you might have heard those silly IT guys talking about at work.

      All and all the bbc is a fairly good organisation with its respect to Linux and open software.

      http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/reports/1 17 6/1/

      --
      I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said: "I drank what?" - Chris Knight (Val Kilmer)- Real Genius
    2. Re:i fail to see... by technix4beos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not every interview has to be stellar material to be interesting to the market.

      I for one am glad that Linus has chosen such a bold move and taken some time for himself. Linux is certainly not going to help raise his offspring, and it shouldn't be eating into his most important reason for living: his family.

      The BBC has always held a good feeling in my heart too, for their very even handed coverage of world events.

      An interview like this is trying to show the lighter, more human side of what was traidionally perceived as as the every geeks' "Geek God", and show that Linus can change, just like everyone who grows up to realize that life is more than about just computing.

      There were some very real moments in the article, if you looked closely. Linus is moving away from the world he has helped create, and started down the path of another that is blossoming in his home. Good for him.

      So go ahead, flame me for being sincere, and seeing the other side of Linus, I forgive you.

      --
      user@host$ diff /dev/urandom /dev/uspto
    3. Re:i fail to see... by IamNotWitchboy · · Score: 1

      i think you mean Paul Allen.

      --
      The best cure for insomnia is realizing that it is already time to get up. EsteEncanto.com - Blog on technology, urban
  8. Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by CresentCityRon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I felt that the article was not only about LINUX "growing up" but also that its founder has other things that are important. Nothing unusual but I think it makes nontechies feel more comfortable with Linus. Its nothing crazy or cultish. He even puts himself down a bit at the end.

    The next time RMS rants about why he's not getting the attention that he should this link needs to be forwarded to him to show how it should be done.

    1. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Sunnan · · Score: 5, Informative

      I don't have to imagine anything.
      Here is a BBC interview with RMS.

      I thought it was great, but then again, I like RMS.

    2. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Ya gotta love his understated approach. Deflect any idea that this is competing with MS, but then quitely state that MS has the same fate as IBM in their future. It's a prediction, not an attack.

      The streets were littered with the carcasses of companies that tried to compete head to head with IBM, while the world was quitely changing under them and they didn't even know. It was open systems and high value UNIX servers that did them in, not MS. Until recently, Windows systems only competed with their terminals, and they were happy to sell PCs as terminals (maybe not happy about competing with generic clones of their own product).

      The next transformation involves the OS retreating into the background from the user's point of view. With MS trying to get a bigger and bigger piece of the revenue pie, they are doomed to fail because there isn't that much value in what they are providing. Eventually they just won't have much of a value proposition to sell, and they are already too bloated to become lean and mean and really compete again. This is the eventual fate of any organization that embraces monopoly practices. Gates will still be rich, just a bit less so, but nobody will care and this will make him very unhappy.

      Ever notice how people who care too much about the attention they are getting aren't very happy, and it doesn't help them get attention either? RMS has contributed too much to the community to quibble about whether he deserves it or not, but he and he alone is responsible for the situation.

    3. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Proprietary software is an anti-social system and I hope to see that system come to an end

      that's all you really need to see that he is clueless about how the world works, and why he's not taken more seriously.

    4. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by xingix · · Score: 0

      Not trying to start an argument here, but can somebody explain to me how anyone can make a living writing open-source, free software? It just doesn't add up. Sure, you can grab investments, but if the only thing you're selling is support, how can there be a future with programmers making nothing for their efforts? Please explain! Thanks :-D

      --

      Confucious says: Man who runs behind car gets exhausted.

      // jeku.com

    5. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by DrKirwin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the idea is that you're paid to solve problems with code, not for the code itself. The code is just a tool toward that end, not an end in itself.

    6. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Sunnan · · Score: 1
      There are several ways.

      1. Sell support and enhancements.
      2. Hope for donations (directly or people buying from you).
      3. The Street Performers Protocol like Mandrake or Blender uses
      4. Write custom software for business or government.


      5. The GNU project will release a book on this topic soon.

        Anyway, this is bordering on the off-topic.
    7. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Gibbys+Box+of+Trix · · Score: 1

      Still something missing in your plan.... hmmm...

      Phase 1: Solve 66% of the problem
      Phase 2: Solve 33% of the problem
      Phase 3: ???
      Phase 4: Profit!!!

    8. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by nil+error · · Score: 1

      I agree.. also when Linus said

      "I've tried to stay out of the Microsoft debate. If you start doing things because you hate others and want to screw them over the end result is bad," he said."

      I have seen this so much in the computer industry - and it just leads people down a path that they would not go down if they were not trying to prove themselves out of hatred (and this just hurts them)...anyways after I read Linus's biography I really wanted to meet him - on the other hand after I read RMS's...
      - nil

    9. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then again, Stallman is a bit of a commie. Hell, not a bit, a BIG communist. What the hell does he do for a living? Last time I heard anything about him he lived in an office at a university. Basically he sounds like yet another hippy fucktard that couldn't make it in the real world.

    10. Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Sunnan · · Score: 1

      " Ever notice how people who care too much about the attention they are getting aren't very happy, and it doesn't help them get attention either?"

      As far as I can see, RMS doesn't talk about the GNU/Linux naming issue or the credit issue or even the free software/open source naming issue in the BBC interview.

  9. Few thoughts. by cioxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    BBC is the only mainstream outlet with the balls to cover linux in positive manner. CNN did feature few articles, but they never saw the light of day. It was dumbed down on few occasions and made sound like it was an indie/experimental OS. I hope that trend changes really quick, although I have my doubts that MSNBC will ever cover Linux developments in detail. Biased source.. you know the deal.

    And from unrelated rants department, if I ever had the option to hang out with either Bill Gates or Linus Torvalds, I'd choose Gates.

    I wish he was the prophet of linux community. He fits the nerd profile so well. It's heartbreaking that one of us is trying to destroy his kind of people.

    In a perfect world, Bill Gates would fight Linus from the other side of the OS spectrum. Imagine how world would have been different if Gates didn't choose the dark side.

    We can dream, can't we?

    1. Re:Few thoughts. by The+J+Kid · · Score: 1

      You watch too much Star Wars.

      But anyway...don't get you're hopes up too much...
      This was a ClickOnline report and therefore is only on BBC World and most 'mainstream' people will no see it.

      --
      Moderation: +4. Modded 70% Funny and 30% Overrated. 100% Saturated.
    2. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
      In a perfect world, Bill Gates would fight Linus from the other side of the OS spectrum. Imagine how world would have been different if Gates didn't choose the dark side.

      Billy didn't chose the dark side. As the son of two lawyers, it's much like he was born into it.

    3. Re:Few thoughts. by technix4beos · · Score: 1

      BBC World is seen by more than geeks.

      It has a huge following by people that like to think outside the box, and who care about our planet.

      Mainstream people are not just sheep anymore. They also include people whom are slowly realizing that the world they live in has some serious issues, and are stumbling across sites like BBC World every minute, in MASS numbers.

      It's only a matter of time, patience, effort, and sweat by hard working people, before a lot of the dreams we thought as as fictional become reality, but that won't happen (I admit) for quite some time. Who knows... I do know one thing though, and that is as far as humanity is concerned, we always find a way to bring back the balance we need to survive, no matter what the conditions.

      Reminds me of world war II, but that is a topic for another day.

      And, one last thing.. "Those that ignore history are bound to repeat it."

      --
      user@host$ diff /dev/urandom /dev/uspto
    4. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      his mother was a primary school teacher, not a lawyer you retard.

    5. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why choose Bill Gates to meet? He doesn't know shit about programming or computers in general. He is a punk marketing shit-boy. Linus Torvalds probably forgot more than Bill Gates ever knew.

    6. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Billy wrote, together with Paul Allen, the BASIC interpreter for the Altair - in 8080 assembler. Even Steven Levy states that in his famous book.

    7. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, I fucked that up. His father is still a lawyer, though (and I think also his eldest sister), so my point still holds.

      Laugh, it's funny!

    8. Re:Few thoughts. by ceejayoz · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I hope that trend changes really quick, although I have my doubts that MSNBC will ever cover Linux developments in detail.

      That's just a couple of MSNBC's recent articles on Linux. In general, MSNBC's actually one of the most pro-Linux major news sources on the 'net.
    9. Re:Few thoughts. by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 2
      I wish he was the prophet of linux community. He fits the nerd profile so well. It's heartbreaking that one of us is trying to destroy his kind of people.

      Who exactly to you mean by 'one of us'? You mean RMS? That's just silly. RMS has a point about the economics of propriatary software even if you don't agree with a lot of his positions and tactics. The GPL is the fuel of the Open/Free source movement for good reasons, and it is really a quite brilliant innovation.

      I can't disagree more about who would be a more interesting friend to have. Gates is as boring as all of suburbia, while I'm sure that Linus would have interesting things to say about a lot of topics if you can draw him out.

      Gates is only hurting himself and his company by fighting. I suspect the core dynamics relate to control. I've read that customer focus is really the key to his success, but how does actively fighting off Open/Free source help his customers? Clearly it doesn't, so there must be another motivater (control). I don't really care if they (MS) figure it out or not, and it probably doesn't matter much to the Open/free source community. They are driving people to Apple and Linux to a lesser extent, but it's not that significant for most of us.

    10. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Big deal. Altair BASIC had what, like 4 keywords? And 8080 assembler has what, like 10 instructions? It couldn't be that hard.

    11. Re:Few thoughts. by InsaneGeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Are you being serious??? That article had hardly any talk of linux in it at all, mainly just a fluffy, candy, human interest story about how a techie likes to spend his time with his kids instead of with other programmers.

      You could take the same article replace Microsoft with Charmin toiletpaper, linux with Cottonelle, and their respective creators and have the exact same article. There was absolutely no technical information about why linux is or is not good. Just an human-interest article that's ironically not good even good enough to use as toiletpaper.

    12. Re:Few thoughts. by jgalun · · Score: 2, Informative

      This makes no sense. As another poster points out a couple comments down, MSNBC has had plenty of nice coverage of Linux. As you point out, CNN featured a few articles on Linux ("never really saw the light of day" - I'm not sure what that means, since they were on the site). The New York Times recently had a positive editorial about Linux and has covered Linux many times in the business section. Forbes, Fortune, BusinessWeek have covered Linux, often in a positive manner about how it can save the enterprise money.

      Yes, sometimes the articles are not great, but tech journalism is often not up to our standards as Slashdot geeks. But that doesn't mean that the other news outlets don't "have the balls to cover linux in a positive manner."

    13. Re:Few thoughts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Altair had, like, 8K of memory (K as in 1024) Go and fit a BASIC interpreter in less than 8K (you should leave space for the user programs!).

      Of course, it pales in comparision to the Linux kernel, but the point is that Billy was a programmer. After his early years he bought DOS from another guy and then hired a staff of developers and sealed an exclusive agreement with IBM, but he started as a programmer, one smart (as in business-smart) enough to get good deals (for him, not the users), but a programmer none the less.

    14. Re:Few thoughts. by jgalun · · Score: 1

      I've read that customer focus is really the key to his success, but how does actively fighting off Open/Free source help his customers? Clearly it doesn't, so there must be another motivater (control).

      No, the motivater isn't control, it's success. Customer focus may be the key to his success, but that makes customer focus the means, and success (measured in money) the end. If the means - customer focus - started to lead to the end of everyone using Open/Free software, as you suggest, then suddenly those means are leading to failure for Microsoft (as measured in money) not success.

      Therefore, he changes the means to whatever will succeed in bringing him success.

    15. Re:Few thoughts. by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 2
      Kind of a hollow definition of success, isn't it?

      My claim is that fighting Open/free source will lead to failure, although it may take a long time. The response is driven by fear, which is related to loss of control. If they really had confidence that their products, and more importantly services would continue to have value in the marketplace, they wouldn't react the way they do. Not do overdo the Star Wars analogy, but fear is characteristic of the dark side. They seek to instill fear (FUD) because they are trying to cover up their own fear.

    16. Re:Few thoughts. by blane.bramble · · Score: 1

      I think the important point is with Paul Allen - I have seen a report in the past (sorry, years ago, possibly wasn't even online!) that implied that Paul Allen did the majority of the programming.

    17. Re:Few thoughts. by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      True, it was fluff, I saw the interview on tv, on the BBC World show, Click Online.
      The show itself is lightweight, which may explain the fluffiness of the interview.

      I would suggest, though, that having a lightweight interview like this does not bar more heavy interviews, it adds to them, and, because of it's style, reaches another audience, raising the profile of Linux, and non-MS OSes, etc.

      It doesn't have to be a blistering interview to do that, either, it just has to say, this is here, it exists, and the BBC deems it important/newsworthy enough to cover.

      It serves as a doorway to the restaurant, not the steak dinner.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    18. Re:Few thoughts. by jgalun · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, very hollow definition of success. But then again, if you offered me a choice between success as in $40 billion, and success as in being part of the Open/Free source bandwagon, to be honest, I'd take the $40 billion. And that's pretty much the choice most people would make too.

      Will fighting Open/Free source lead to failure? I happen to believe that eventually open software will prove more popular than Microsoft's offerings - not because they're open, but because they're cheaper. On the other hand, if Microsoft stopped fighting Open/Free source today, they lose out on all the profits they could generate until that day of failure comes. I mean, I think MS could keep selling Windows and Office, etc. for years and make huge bucks off it. Why stop now?

    19. Re:Few thoughts. by rat7307 · · Score: 1

      Are you being serious??? That article had hardly any talk of linux in it at all, mainly just a fluffy, candy, human interest story about how a techie likes to spend his time with his kids instead of with other programmers.

      True, but any press in the 'Mainstream' about Linux is a positive (except the 'Linux worm halts internet' type reports...).

      People like linus are probably the best people to have as Linux advocates. Geeks ranting and foaming at the mouth with anti-MS vitriol do not help the 'cause' one bit.

      Calm, rational, normal(ish) people who are willing to do a bit of puff every now and then are going to get Linux into peoples minds.

      It worked for Apple, and could work for the Linux community.

      Start with some puff, and gradually add the details.

      At least its a start....

      --
      Burma?
  10. Hate to Burst their bubble by Streiff · · Score: 3, Informative

    but Linux is not an Operating System. It's a kernel.

    Linux by itself doesn't do much.

    1. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 2
      But the kernel is the OS, the rest is just utilities and tools. Take Windows 3.x, 9[58], etc. vs NT and its follow-ons. They are different OSs, and this has little to do with whether any or all of the other tools are much the same.

      It's not really producting to play semantic games with this anyway, but who would claim that you don't have a new OS when the GNU HURD is ready to compete with Linux? All the rest will change little.

    2. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by johnkp · · Score: 1

      Linux by itself handles quite a lot.
      Controls the CPU(s), the main memory, I/O modules and system interconnection and provides an API to userland, but it's still just a kernel.

      To make it a operating system it must IMHO provide some user interface, e.g. bash, or COMMAND.COM or whatever, and some basic filesystem utilities like ls, rm, cd etc.

    3. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shutup shutup SHUTUP

    4. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 2

      but Linux is not an Operating System. It's a kernel.

      Linux by itself doesn't do much.


      Yes, and not to troll...but this is why Linux won't replace windows on the desktop. For whatever reason, usability doesn't attract open source developers.

      There are plenty of people volunteering thier time to improve scheduling routines, journaling filesystems, etc...and these are good features...but almost noone is lining up to do the kind of work that will make Linux useable. It's almost as if there's a mutual exclusivity, the more passionate the OSS developer is...the closer to the hardware the programming is...there are a few rare exceptions like Gnome, or Enlightenment...but who's volunteering to update stuff like that?

      It's too bad there aren't more people out there who like to solve useability problems. But it's as Linus said:

      "Most people don't want to change. They may hate Windows but they run it despite that because, quite frankly, they don't care about computers,"

      Too bad it's equally true that people who care about computers don't care about human useability. It pretty much ensures that Linux will never be a "household" word.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    5. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > but Linux is not an Operating System. It's a kernel.
      > Linux by itself doesn't do much.

      Here I have a floppy and an UML image here, it is Linux + uClibc + BusyBox. It can boot up with a floppy or as UML image, it can be used as a router/firewall, or add Bind to become DNS server, or add Sendmail to be comes a mail server.

      Neither uClibc nor Busybox is part of GNU base system, Linux is (plus a journaled FS and all the drivers). Show me any OS that does not need any base utilities and run everything inside the kernel.

      Get your facts straight: LINUX IS AN OPERATING SYSTEM.

    6. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by the_real_tigga · · Score: 1

      For whatever reason, usability doesn't attract open source developers.

      probably not. nevertheless, there are known exaples of usable (~usability) open souce projects.

      For example, I personally find the way of WindowMaker to start a program by the system menu (click anywhere and the launcher menu appears) much, much, MUCH more usable than to have to go to some randomly chosen point-of-origin of the launcher menu like "Start" or the GNOME or KDE varieties.
      Heck, if I want a program to run, I want to start it right now, not after travelling to the bottom left corner.

      Or look at the keyboard shortcuts for mplayer - cursor navigation thru videos: new (!), intuitive and simple. "f" for fullscreen, "p" for pause, "q" to quit. compare that to the (without any doubt well-paid for) useability of programs like Windows Media Plaer, Quicktime or *shiver* PowerDVD.

      --
      my .sig is better than yours.
    7. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Streiff · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected.

      Linux by itself does alot, but it doesn't allow the end user do his job.

      Linux coupled with GNU tools does alot. I don't go around saying GNU/Linux all the time, but they do have a point.

    8. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux by itself doesn't do much

      Thank you, Richard Stallman.

      Now, shut up.

    9. Re:Hate to Burst their bubble by Streiff · · Score: 1

      My point is Linux by itself is a kernel, not an operating system.

      Linux and bash is an operating system. Linuxh and tsch is an operating system. Linux needs to be coupled with something else to be an operating system.

  11. Exactly by ekrout · · Score: 1, Troll
    "People may hate Windows but they run it despite that because, quite frankly, they don't care about computers." -- Linus Torvalds, speaking to the BBC
    Exactly. Computers aren't the all-consuming hobbies/professions/religions that they are for most Slashdot members.

    The reason that I feel Linus' desktop market share will continue to erode is because it's not the best product out there right now, whether you'd like to believe that or not. The everyday person doesn't even know that software has licenses, so they just use what's on their computer and learn to live with it.

    And, unfortunately for some of you, the Windows family of operating systems are growing increasingly easy to live with now that they're actually stable, well-written, often-updated and improved, pieces of software.

    So you heard it from the horse's mouth: don't push your religion on others, use Linux if you want to.

    Those of you who claim to be so enamored with your machines should take a look in the mirror and figure out where all that anger's coming from. Chances are the root of it stems from trying to turn Linux and the second-rate programs written for it into a desktop OS. Doing such a thing is like when your teenage son puts a fart can and RS stickers on his 1988 Honda Civic -- he may have good intentions, but everyone knows what's under the hood.

    Linux isn't ready for the desktop and may never be. Mac OS X is ready for the desktop, and the amazing software programs and hardware devices that it supports is truly amazing.
    --

    If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
    1. Re:Exactly by technix4beos · · Score: 1

      I have to laugh... Windoze today has more viruses, exploits, and holes in it than ever before, and is surely NOT as stable as say, windows 3.11 for workgroups.

      I remember seeing a machine running WFW3.11 that was on for 4 YEARS. YEARS......

      Not even win2k has that kind of uptime.

      As far as ease of use, that's debatable. The GUI in Windows XP is horrid, and full of many inconsistancies, not to mention just outright garrish in color use.

      I would also like to point out that linux overall is getting better with each release/distro as time goes by, and still has a sizable chunk of the server market, where it's strengths really do lie.

      The desktop market is in for a rude awakening though, in 1-2 years when openBeOS becomes more mainstream. Mark my words. The summer of 2004 will be a VERY good time for all interested in Audio and Video development.

      That is all I wil say for now, have a great day.

      --
      user@host$ diff /dev/urandom /dev/uspto
    2. Re:Exactly by ekrout · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I have to laugh... Windoze today has more viruses, exploits, and holes in it than ever before, and is surely NOT as stable as say, windows 3.11 for workgroups.

      You sound like an idiot. Back up your unsubstantiated claims with some facts, please; that's how research is done, and how reputations are solidified. You're not doing too well for yourself so far.

      I remember seeing a machine running WFW3.11 that was on for 4 YEARS. YEARS......

      See? Windows isn't the anti-Christ that you all make it out to be.

      Not even win2k has that kind of uptime.

      Again, you're wrong, and again, no facts or studies to back your claim up. I think 90% of Slashdotters use Windows 2000 (per recent polls); that that's saying something.

      As far as ease of use, that's debatable. The GUI in Windows XP is horrid, and full of many inconsistancies, not to mention just outright garrish in color use.

      Hehe. At least Microsoft has a team of experts design their GUI rather than some unemployed bearded guy in a flannel shirt. And, for what it's worth, Windows XP is quite smooth and responsive and intuitive, just like all Microsoft products usually are.

      I would also like to point out that linux overall is getting better with each release/distro as time goes by, and still has a sizable chunk of the server market, where it's strengths really do lie.

      My point exactly -- Linux will never be anything on the desktop for 99% of computer users.

      The desktop market is in for a rude awakening though, in 1-2 years when openBeOS becomes more mainstream. Mark my words. The summer of 2004 will be a VERY good time for all interested in Audio and Video development.

      I wish you the best of luck, but I would wager that the same thing was said for Linux back in 1997 or so.

      --

      If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
    3. Re:Exactly by vidnet · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Linux isn't ready for the desktop and may never be.



      Whose desktop?

      On my desktop, it runs like a charm and I love it.



      I didn't like Windows on my desktop, could that mean that Windows isn't perfectly suited either.



      It's all a matter of definition. And don't start a "majority of users" speech before the "majority of users" have tried Linux.

    4. Re:Exactly by vadim_t · · Score: 1
      You mean this poll? The one that says that Win2K is used by 40% and Linux by 33%? If you look at that poll you'll see that the sum of all the Windows systems is just 47%.

      Now, I don't have anything people using windows (hell, I do), but please, stop lying about it. And your condescending tone doesn't impress me at all.

    5. Re:Exactly by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      Have to agree with the others here, Linux (read GNU/Linux) is plain fantastic on my desktop. I'm using KDE 3.1 (nothing against GNOME) and couldn't be happier. As for easy to live with, it depends on what you're referring to. It's certainly easy to work on but I do admittedly still have to do configuration and upgrades for friends and family. Hopefully, the LSB will help lay the groundwork for developing common configuration tools for the "point-and-click" user set. As for me, vi and a bash shell are all the configuration tools I need.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    6. Re:Exactly by csnydermvpsoft · · Score: 1

      I'll admit that Windows is getting better as time goes on (though Win2000 is much better than WinXP), however that is not Microsoft's problem. Their problem is that they are continuing to treat their users like cash cows, not customers. Their recent change in business licenses is causing a lot of businesses to scramble for alternatives. I don't use Windows XP because even for five or six desktops, because the licensing is both expensive and a pain. Even if I own enough XP licenses for all the computers, I have to use a different serial number for each one, and register them individually as well. I have five or six Win98 licenses, but I still use the same serial number for convenience.

    7. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you weren't impressed? oooo, I'm so sorry.

    8. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that very poll.

      If more than half of all REGISTERED members of the biggest open-source site in the world USE WINDOWS, how many OVERALL do you think use Windows?

      There are A LOT more people who AREN'T registered than there are folks who've registered.

    9. Re:Exactly by vadim_t · · Score: 1


      47% is less than half
      </pedantic>

      Honestly, I don't care how many people use Windows. I'm just tired of people exagerating statistics for their own benefit. If you want to point how many people use it, fine, but say where you got that information from. Also, that poll was about the OS on the main computer. I know of many people who use Windows because they need it to work and play but have a Linux server in the corner. And AFAIK there are no reliable statistics about that.

    10. Re:Exactly by the_real_tigga · · Score: 1

      How come the parent is rated troll , and this guy isn't?

      --
      my .sig is better than yours.
    11. Re:Exactly by GoldMace · · Score: 1

      Well, did you bother even doing the math? Of course no one has had Windows 2000 running for four years, it hasn't even been around for four years. There might indeed be some people with machines that have had Windows 2000 up for over four years straight when they decide to switch to openBeOS in the summer of 2004 to prepare for better Audio and Video development as you suggest.

    12. Re:Exactly by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "It's all a matter of definition. And don't start a "majority of users" speech before the "majority of users" have tried Linux."
      Was it Manoj Srivastava who first said...

      "Eat shit -- billions of flies can't be wrong."

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  12. In other news... by echophase · · Score: 4, Funny

    Linus Torvalds, the man behind the creation of Linux, which is used by millions of computers around the globe, has went to use the bathroom, possibly to take a leak. Full coverage can be seen on Slashdot (http://www.slashdot.org) Another article with no fluff.

    1. Re:In other news... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Linus Torvalds, the man behind the creation of Linux, which is used by millions of computers around the globe, has went to use the bathroom, possibly to take a leak. Full coverage can be seen on Slashdot (http://www.slashdot.org) Another article with no fluff.
      No fluff? No buff???
    2. Re:In other news... by nutbar · · Score: 1

      Newsflash at 10:

      Linus later left, a bad smell emenating from the bathroom. Critics have been proved wrong and it was in fact number two.

  13. Tux by BorgDrone · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is it just me or did Tux gain weight ?

    1. Re:Tux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what I was thinking. Probably due to all that corporate sponsership he has been getting lately.

    2. Re:Tux by isorox · · Score: 2

      Is it just me or did Tux [bbc.co.uk] gain weight ?

      Yes, the suns just come up in antartica and the first feast of the year has hit penguinkind.

    3. Re:Tux by T-Kir · · Score: 2

      Like many of us out there, Tux has probably been overdosing on Pizza and 'forgets' to do any excercise.

      Now I suppose I ought to go the the gym now... no I don't think so, I have more ./ reading and programming to do :)

      --
      Are you local? There's nothing for you here!
  14. GNU / LINUX by wiZd0m · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Mr Torvalds enjoys the notoriety he has achieved as the man that challenged the Microsoft empire with his open source alternative operating system."

    Stallman will certainly enjoy this one :)
  15. A new Radio Play by Gabrill · · Score: 1

    The HitchHikers Guide to Linux!

    --
    Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
    1. Re:A new Radio Play by Jawju · · Score: 1

      Entry for Linux: Mostly harmless :-)

  16. Yeah, the inventor of the whole operating system! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Talking to BBC World ClickOnline at his home in Silicon Valley, the inventor of the Linux operating system admitted that he has never been in the same room with his arch-rival.

    (emphasis mine)

    Since when Linus invented the shell, the GUI and the developing tools? Hint: never. He just did the kernel.

  17. Re:Yeah, the inventor of the whole operating syste by another_plonk · · Score: 0

    The shell is not part of the operating system.
    kernel == operating system

  18. Much longer video interview by seldolivaw · · Score: 5, Informative

    This article is just excerpts from a much more substantial video interview on BBC world. Ironically, the video interview is only available in Windows media, and the page doesn't display properly in Mozilla :-)

    1. Re:Much longer video interview by Secure42 · · Score: 1

      Anyway you can see it under linux if you have avifile and Win32 codec binaries installed in your system
      On RedHat you can install pre-build binaries from www.freshrpms.net

      Can somebody tell me is there is anyway to record it?

    2. Re:Much longer video interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can use Hi Net Recorder for Windows, for linux i don't known

  19. OMG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ok, caught the interview on BBCWorld yesterday.

    Linus, come back a.s.a.p. - as if your Leno habit wasn't disturbing enough, you then started sounding like an American and now look like an American. This is not good. You need a steady diet of hernesoppa, kirnupiimä and ruisleipä (some salmiakki for afters, of course) urgently.

    1. Re:OMG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      salmiakki tastes like medicine, you guys are brainwashed from childhood into liking it :)

  20. kernel != operating system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And exactly how are you going to input commands to the kernel? voice activation? ("little penguin, please execute this program with this arguments") You need either a shell or gui.

    I don't want to start a Operating System Definition flamewar here (many bits have been dedicated to that) but a mere kernel does not an operating system make.

  21. Erode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, it seems to be increasing all the time.

    Mac OS X ready for the desktop? When it gets Direct X and thereby supports the majority of games out there, maybe. What, games aren't required for something to be ready for the desktop? Then how can people insist Linux isn't ready for the desktop, what with an office application and multimedia out the wazoo?

    No, no, I don't think Linux is 'ready' for the desktop either. It has a long way to go. Just look at all the idiocy at the Gnome and KDE camps - people whining and screaming because RedHat is taking their sacred cows and turning them into something that stands a chance of becoming an environment the average user could comprehend.

    (Remember, kids, if you GPL your code, you no longer have a sacred cow.)

    Oh, on a side rant, my Linux box supports more hardware than any Mac box. ;)

    1. Re:Erode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Just look at all the idiocy at the Gnome and KDE camps

      No. Only the KDE camp has been whining about it. The GNOME camp didn't say a word and accepted the whole thing.

    2. Re:Erode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just look at all the idiocy at the Gnome and KDE camps"
      and then
      "That's probably because the KDE people actually care about their product, as it's not fucking 4th rate dogshit like GNOME is."

      Ah, so caring about a product is a bad thing?

  22. IBM by borgesian · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Instead it is more likely that Microsoft will become like IBM - "still huge but not the dominant force anymore", he said.

    Interesting pararalel. This sentence could be interpreted more than one way but its interesting how by implication he seems to dismiss the importance of IBM's support, something that is given way too much weight and considering the reliability of Corporate alliances, one day could very well backfire. Overall, a pretty dull interview, I could almost hear him yawning.
    1. Re:IBM by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Overall, a pretty dull interview, I could almost hear him yawning.

      That's the way Linus always is in interviews with the press. I don't think this PR stuff really exictes him, especially since people are always asking about MS, something he really doesn't care about. He's told them over and over, he really doesn't care what MS is doing, as long as he can continue to make Linux better than Linux.

      People always tend to ask kernel hackers about the latest desktop environments, or about things they really don't care much about other than as users of said applications.

      It's like, imagine you worked on aircraft engines, even designed a revolutionary engine... and in interviews, people always asked you about the latest wing design and advances in providing high speed internet access to passengers... it's tangential to what you are interested in. You'd sound bored too.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  23. Strange things... by bbtom · · Score: 1

    On http://www.bbcworld.com/content/template_clickonli ne.asp?pageid=666&co_pageid=3

    They have a link saying "You can read about his new book, 'Just For Fun', at Slashdot". Unfortunately, they've linked to ThinkGeek.com, not Slashdot.

    Whoops. And the BBC are waffling on about being techno-literate all the time.

    --
    catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
  24. Torvalds by SabberFlapper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    why doesn't he use his popularity to raise some public money to fund projects? The Gov's will invite him and listen carefully.

  25. Yeah, I know a few people who would by Em+Emalb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "He would not, however, want to become personally involved in the dispute with Microsoft.

    "I've tried to stay out of the Microsoft debate. If you start doing things because you hate others and want to screw them over the end result is bad," he said."


    This just makes good business sense on his part. Never, ever, has he said he wanted to overthrow Microsoft. Why would he? Why bring the wrath of several billion dollars to bear on yourself?

    Let the software speak for itself. Besides, he has enough people arguing for him he can move on to more important things.

    --
    Sent from your iPad.
    1. Re:Yeah, I know a few people who would by MasterOfMagic · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      This just makes good business sense on his part. Never, ever, has he said he wanted to overthrow Microsoft. Why would he? Why bring the wrath of several billion dollars to bear on yourself?

      Or the wrath of several billion dollars of hitmen.

    2. Re:Yeah, I know a few people who would by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let the software speak for itself.

      Where can I get that plug-in?

  26. It's a little thin... by Senator_B · · Score: 1

    "It's a little thin..."

    much like this news post

    1. Re:It's a little thin... by oever · · Score: 2

      I think Linus is getting fat.

      --
      DNA is the ultimate spaghetti code.
    2. Re:It's a little thin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell yeah, he is starting to look like cowbuy neal.
      Fuckin pig. :)

  27. quote for /. zealots by targo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you start doing things because you hate others and want to screw them over the end result is bad.

    There are many people here who are trying to be holier than the pope and prove in all ways that they are the true believeres and revolutionaries. And so they try to demonstrate their loyalty to "the cause" on every occasion by lamenting how this or that organization will bring the apocalypse and BillG is the antichrist. Hope this will calm them a bit.

    1. Re:quote for /. zealots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oooh, insightful.
      Want to calm down teenagers ?
      Good luck !

    2. Re:quote for /. zealots by kleinux · · Score: 2, Funny

      but who ever said the Pope is holy?

  28. Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah yeah, I think it's great that "Linux" just got some mainstream press exposure, but the more I see Linus Torvalds speak the more I despise him.

    How is it that he rarely if ever mentions GNU's contribution to "Linux". Sorry folks but you need to all recognize that Linux is a kernel and not an operating system.

    Also, let's all be real and admit that Linux would not be where it is today without the countless amazing free tools that GNU has provided.

    Linus has the responsibility to say something about GNU, especially in a high profile interview such as this. I don't care if the interviewer is ignorant and doesn't know to ask anything about GNU.

    Linus should be man enough to pay his respects where they are due. Now, thanks to this interview, the truth has been thwarted once more and GNU's vision of FREE (NOT as in beer) software is steadily going out the window.

    Boy this makes me really look forward to the GNU kernel Hurd. I think Linux is about to go onto the long list of things I am boycotting out of principle.

    "In a way it is fun. I'm pleased to be a poster boy. It gives me some self-importance." Linus, please give us a break. Let me go out back and cry for your under-appreciated ego.

    Don't super-programmers aspire to anything greater than the shrine of the blasted machine?!

    1. Re:Show Some Respect! by TheKey · · Score: 4, Funny

      Come on, RMS. Posting as AC again?

      --
      My Journal - 1,337 fans and countin
    2. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh, give me a break will you? There's exactly ONE thing from the GNU project that Linus has ever needed and that's GCC (and binutils).
      Admittedly, that's not a small thing in itself, but I don't hear you complain about the BSD folks who's needed GCC just as much as Linus did.
      Do you really think that the lack of all the rest of the GNU tools would've stopped Linus for even one second? I do think bash was the first real program he ever ran on Linux, but if that hadn't been available, there would still have been plenty of free shells to choose from.
      Whether all the Linux-based distributions could've happened without GNU is another question. I'm sure they would have, but if they'd have been as popular is off course impossible to say. In any case, I'll admit there's some merit to asking for credit from the distribution makers. Also don't forget that pretty much all of the network-related tools in a Linux-distribution comes from BSD anyway.

      Anyway.. I guess what I'm trying to say is that just stop picking on Linus will you? All he's ever wanted is to hack on his kernel, he's never asked for anything for it and the distro people's benefitted WAY more than Linus from GNU's contributions anyway. And finally, I'm sure Linus would've hacked on his kernel regardless of the availability of GNU tools. (Except for GCC as I've already said)

    3. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ONE thing? I highly doubt Linus' use of GNU tools is limited to GCC and binutils.

      Also, please don't bring in the old "BSD didn't do this ... yada yada yada" cliche. In the GNU/Linux FAQ Stallman says:
      BSD systems today use some GNU packages, just as the GNU system and its variants use some BSD programs; however, taken as wholes, they are two different systems that evolved separately. The BSD developers did not write a kernel and add it to the GNU system, so a name like GNU/BSD would not fit the situation.

      The connection between GNU/Linux and GNU is much closer, and that's why the name "GNU/Linux" is appropriate for it.
      Stallman said himself that BSD vs Linux is an apple and oranges comparison. In other words if the debate is about apples, you don't say, "well oranges are ... yada yada yada."

      And yes, I do think Linux would never have come as far as it has without GNU. You mention GCC, but what about the GNU C Library. How many programs rely on this library to run? How widespread would Linux (the kernel) be without such a library. What about GNOME, how great would GNU/Linux be without the GNOME desktop?

      Take a look at the list of GNU software at http://www.gnu.org/directory/GNU/ and try to tell me Linus and other kernel hackers don't use AT LEAST five of those programs day in and day out.

      There would probably be Linux distributions, but there wouldn't be so many. Without the GNU tools imagine how hard it would be to assemble a quality distribution. GNU/Linux is still weak on the desktop, but without GNU it would be weak on the command-line as well, which is certainly not the case today.

      I resepct your defense of Linus as a human-being. I am not attacking Linus, the person Linus, per-say. I am attacking the image that he projects of himself through the media as being a selfish brat! I know he probably doesn't realize he's doing any harm, but I think he is. I'm sure Linus is a wonderful person, father, and all that, but he needs to realize he is in the public eye now. If he would just say, "yeah, you know, I really respect GNU for helping GNU/Linux become so great" once in awhile, we wouldn't be having this discussion.

      Many people see him as THE spokesperson for GNU/Linux. If the so-called leader of a movement does not recognize and pay respect to the things that got him where he is, then he is not worthy of his leader status. Sorry, but that is just how I feel.

      It's like Eminem saying that he created rap, which he doesn't, he recognizes the people that came before him!
    4. Re:Show Some Respect! by FooBarWidget · · Score: 2

      > There's exactly ONE thing from the GNU project
      > that Linus has ever needed and that's GCC (and
      > binutils).

      Come on, can't you think of something better? That excuse is so old. You have nothing to backup your claim. Lots of people said used that excuse, but the fact is that, in the end, Linus did use GNU tools, and lots of 'em. If you have a time machine, go back to the early 90s and convince Linus not to to GNU, and Linux still turns out the way it is now (or better), then people will believe you. But until then, that kind of claims are nothing but useless theories.

    5. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linus said it best himself and I quote:

      I'm a bastard. I have absolutely no clue why people can ever think
      otherwise. Yet they do. People think I'm a nice guy, and the fact is that
      I'm a scheming, conniving bastard who doesn't care for any hurt feelings
      or lost hours of work if it just results in what I consider to be a better
      system.

      And I'm not just saying that. I'm really not a very nice person. I can say
      "I don't care" with a straight face, and really mean it.


      Understand ?? Now get over it.

    6. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. There is no conspiracy to play down the Gnu "contribution".

      2. Beside the kernel, there are very few utilities need to be installed to make a system "work". For example, embedded system. I can use uClibc for the C libraries, BusyBox utilities to replace everything and have a LINUX OPERATING SYSTEM boot up from a floppy.

      I love the Hurd idea and if it is really ready I would install and use it, but it does not mean Linux own everything to Gnu more than its license.

      Linux is an GNU GPL OPERATING SYSTEM, NOT JUST A KERNEL, DON'T PLAY WORDS GAMES.

    7. Re:Show Some Respect! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      I doubt any of this political bs ever entered his mind as he was coding. He used what was available at the time. He had a working kernel 10 years before the GNU project did (and some would argue, still does). The GNU project needed a kernel. Linux fit the bill pretty well. Don't forget the *BSDs that use the GNU utils. I'm sure those developers are 'guilty' of the same 'crimes' somewhere in history.

      wtf is up with all of this bullshit crying and bitching? WHO CARES? All of this is supposed to be 'Free' software is it not? The licenses give anyone the FREEdom to do pretty much what they want right? Stop whining about it. This is a pissing contest just like everything else.

    8. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you missed the point of what I'm trying to say.

      It doesn't have any thing to do with politics or whatever conspiracy theories people are talking about. I don't see any conspiracies going on here.

      What never entered Linus' mind is that he is willfully stepping on people by not recognizing their contributions sufficiently.

      The point of this discussion is that Linus and people like you should SHOW SOME RESPECT to GNU for their contribution.

      You people choose to avoid the importance of common courtesy and try to twist the debate into something that it's not.

      I highly doubt Stallman sees this as some contest. All the man wants is his due.

      Just because people dislike Stallman as a person, who can really deny with a straight face that the FSF is and has not been key to GNU/Linux's success.

      If you think not, put your money where your mouth is and come up with a totally non GNU distro and see if anyone but you and your narrow-minded friends use it.

    9. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this quote is totally out of context here. If I remember correctly he said this in relation to rejecting things written for the kernel that weren't up to snuff.

      If you think Linus thinks of himself like this in the context of his family, or any of his personal relationships, I feel sorry for people closely associated with Linus. I doubt Linus carries on like this with his friends and family.

      In other words, nice try.

    10. Re:Show Some Respect! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      I realize what you are saying. I'm not twisting anything, just stating my opinion. I don't remember reading anywhere a statement by Linus that said he wrote anything but a kernel and a few userspace utils (most done by others). He DID say he started the project because he didn't like what else was available. Good for him. The media, like the rest of the non-tech world, are primarily responsible for your complaints because they dont' know the difference between a kernel and a complete OS. Without a GPL'd kernel, the GNU software project was dependent on other systems and Linux was the first viable solution to come along. If you think about it, maybe the GNU project 'owes' a thanks to Linus for doing what they couldn't do at the time. If you want a target to rip into, start with the media. I guarantee you won't get far. It'll be like preaching to a brick wall. gl gg. Even now, a year or two after they announced a stable Hurd, which has more hardware support and performance? Somehow, I doubt its Hurd. IF you are truely upset,instead of complaining about it, get crackin' and help the GNU foundation write a BETTER kernel than linux. That, in my mind, is closer to the philosophy of Free Software and Open Source than pointless whining. Btw, don't forget the BSDs too. They're widely considered to be technically superior to linux. Are you going to start with them because they aren't bowing down to RMS 5 times a day as well? They're too busy writing software. Those who have put their efforts into various GNU projects (glibc, gcc, binutils, etc etc) have their names emblazoned across most of the readme, header and source files, not to mention the adoration of all :). You can't tell me that either Linus or the various distributors are trying to take credit from anyone. YES, linux wouldn't be much without the GNU software. That is a given. I just don't see the point of making a big deal out of it. I don't see how most GNU users should care where the software came from. As long as it is high quality code, all is well. If you hate Linus for his supposed 'deeds', don't run linux. Run Hurd. That's another aspect of Free Software: Choice.

    11. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear you, and I respect your opinion. I just believe too many people have become complacent and take GNU's contribution for granted. Sorry, but I do think it is a big deal. This is an issue that should be debated at length, and not something that we should sweep under the rug because it makes people feel uncomfortable.

      It is your choice whether you want to support Stallman's idea of free software. I just hope that most people realize that GNU has done a lot not only for computers, but society in general, because of the message they try to teach.

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying we should all bow down to GNU and Stallman, I'm just saying we should be concious and appreciative of the things that the FSF has done for all of us. As far as I know, Linus, the self-procalimed "poster boy" of GNU/Linux has never publicly recognized this. I'm sorry, but it saddens me. It makes me think Linus is the tin man poster boy.

      I could be totally wrong in that Linus has said that he appreciates all GNU has done for Linux. And if he has, I am truly sorry for attacking him. It's just I've never read anything where he says anything remotely similar. I'd be curious to know if Linus has ever spoken positively about GNU in any public discussions. Please post links if you have any.

      I'm worried that as the profile of Linus continues to grow, the message of the FSF will get drowned out in the frenzy of Linus' dazzled ego. I'm afraid he will forget about (if he knows) what free software means. The more and more people think Linus is the masthead of GNU/Linux the more likely it is that the free software mantra will be drowned in the pages of history.

      Here we have an opportunity to change the world. I really believe this. We have an opportunity to tell everyone who uses this software that it is okay to speak openly about freedom. It is okay to be political sometimes. It is okay to demand freedom. It is okay to demand respect from others who don't want to see what you have done for them. Are we going to follow people caught up in the media's flash bulbs, or are we going to think like individuals and see the bigger picture.

      Yes, I want Linux, and Linus to succeed as much as the next person but I want GNU/Linux to succeed in a way that no other OS has succeeded before. I don't want to see it's ideals emasculated by corporations who are only interested in businness as usual. Why does it seem to be such a taboo to attach morals or ethics to technology that increasingly dominate our lives?

      After considering this, it becomes clear why Stallman is so adamant about calling Linux GNU/Linux, because very time someone utters that name, they will be forced to think of freedom. How beautiful would that be if GNU/Linux was the dominant OS like Windows is today. Imagine how many people would be in tune with GNU's message of freedom! Not that everyone would bother finding out exactly what GNU is. But at least by calling Linux GNU/Linux, the suggestion is there. It says "hey, there's something more to this program than just a bunch of bits and bytes!". If people continue to refer to the OS as just Linux, where is the gateway to this beautiful discovery. Where's the motivation to find about the people who cared so much about freedom that they intertwined it into the art the is closest to their hearts and minds.

      I believe in this situation terminology is critical. If we continue to refer to the OS as Linux and not GNU/Linux, we are doing ourselves a great disservice. What do we have to lose by giving into Stallman's request?

      Some money grubbing corporations would love to see the free software movement implode. I'm afraid it may if we don't uphold the principles that gave birth to the GPL.

      That said, I am grateful for the fact that Linus chose the GPL for Linux. Perhaps those of you who said that alone is recognition enough are right. Maybe this whole discussion is pointless, maybe it is not. I just hope that Linux continues to be free, whether or not Linus or any of you want to be.

    12. Re:Show Some Respect! by the_real_tigga · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, Linus does not like to refer to GNU when talking about Linux because he does not share the belief of RMS and the FSF that software does have to/should be "ethically correct"-

      Quoting:
      Besides, as the whole notion of "free software" has very little to do with the kernel, please just link to some open source site. One of the more neutral ones is "http://www.debian.org/social_contract.html", for example."


      --
      my .sig is better than yours.
    13. Re:Show Some Respect! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I thought RMS's whole deal was FREEDOM; why shouldn't that include the FREEDOM to not bow at his altar when it comes to giving him the attention he feels entitled to?


      Why shouldn't it be enough that the letters GNU appear in every license that comprises nearly every component of the Linux system?


      The GNU tools are great tools but how much credit does he give AT&T for distributing the source of its Unix operating system? How much credit does he give Berkeley for converting that operating system into one suitable for academia, later to be translated into some of the OTHER free operating systems?


      In programming, nearly everyone borrows something from someone else, fortunately-- it is not necessary to carry everyone's name along with either the codes or the concepts you learned from them.


      Stallman should finish the Carnegie Mellon/HURD and leave Linus alone content in the knowledge that Linux has ignited and blasted free software to a place of prominence ahead of Stallman's own schedule.

  29. Re:Yeah, the inventor of the whole operating syste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you have to remember is "Click Online" has to appeal to a MASSIVE audience, not just geeks - BBC World is broadcast around the world... Tens of millions of people will see the show, so it's no good bogging the whole interview down with techno-babble that the average person wouldn't understand.

  30. OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview? by Chops · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's not really a way to say this without making people groan... moderators, do your worst:

    The reason RMS carps endlessly about the GNU project deserving credit it, quite simply, that the FSF did most of the work that resulted in "Linux." Linus originally set out to write a Unix clone from scratch (a small hobbyist one, not "big and professional like gnu"), but for a variety of reasons the project scaled back to writing a kernel and a handful of userland kernel-glue (insmod, iptables, etc.), and "Linux" distributions are based on GNU userlands -- the C library, compiler toolchain, shell, basic Unix utilities, and desktop (if Gnome) are all GNU things. They make a fairly coherent whole, provide basic system services such as fopen() and ls, and define the user's interface with the computer (bash or Gnome) -- XFree86 and Linux (the kernel) are as essential as GNU is, but they're smaller and they do less to directly define the operation of the system.

    The GNU/Linux beef is one thing (language is inaccurate; koala bears aren't really bears), but calling Linus "the inventor of the Linux operating system" is about like crediting NT to the team that wrote KERNEL32.DLL. RMS spent more than a decade of his life setting up an organization which still puts out voluminous Free code, and crippled himself with RSI writing code to give away, and I see high-modded posts here that treat him with more contempt than I've ever seen aimed at Jack Valenti or Fritz Hollings.

    You've heard this all before, of course, and you're probably sick of it by now -- it's only the slow and plodding truth, and it has no punchline. Worst of all, it takes itself seriously, just like RMS. I really can't think of a short or funny way, though, to explain how wrong it is to shit on the guy who had the idea for the GPL, who argued with the world for years until the idea of open source software started to take hold, who at the time Linux was started had written a lot of the existing Free code personally, and who is directly responsible for the userland most of you supposedly use -- that's not RMS trying to grab credit for someone else's work, that's simply the way it happened, the truth.

    Not funny, and not sexy like "Finnish teenager writes OS in basement; world stunned." But true.

  31. Re:Yeah, the inventor of the whole operating syste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Granted. Yet, as people who know how things are done, we should point it out whenever we can so less informed people can hear about it (if they're willing to, of course).

  32. Re:slightly offtopic.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the goatse guy is the Kwisatz Haderach !

  33. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi!

    Thank you Chops, for a truly insightful post. We must give credit always where credit is due.

    Cheers,
    GNU/Wolfgang

  34. MSNBC actually hasn't been totally biased... by MsGeek · · Score: 3, Informative
    although I have my doubts that MSNBC will ever cover Linux developments in detail. Biased source.. you know the deal.

    MSNBC has done some surprisingly UNbiased articles about Linux. They have done some excellent articles on:

    to name but three. Gary Krakow did all three articles and nobody's muzzled him yet.

    I also remember that "The Site" show on MSNBC was very scrupulous in trying to make sure MacOS and Linux got as much time as possible. The fact that Leo Laporte and Soledad O'Brien were both Mac heads probably helped. If you recall, when "The Site" was pulled (it was getting far less ratings than the wall-to-wall Princess Di coverage) it spawned ZDTV, later to be known as TechTV.

    Alas, Soledad, where have you gone?

    About Gates as geek deity: the Flynn character in "Tron" was kind of modeled after him. It would be cool if in "Tron 2.0" Flynn goes from being a downtrodden geek to being an evil monopolist who revives the MCP to dominate the brave new world of Cyberspace. It would work.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  35. Well, the man certainly has gravity by mtec · · Score: 1

    and carries great weight.

    (he's actually becoming a penguin)

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!
  36. Notice the BBC world's video link? by Viking5150 · · Score: 0

    In the link, the page ID read "pageid=666". Maybe Microsoft was right...perhaps Linus and Linux are evil after all? ;-)

  37. A kernel by mtec · · Score: 1

    of truth.

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!
  38. Tux has put on weight ;) by caluml · · Score: 1

    How fat is that penguin in the BBC article?

    Must be all that sitting down, and hacking away, with nothing but pizza to eat!

    C'mon Tux - start dieting and exercising - you've got to get back to your sexy self again.

    1. Re:Tux has put on weight ;) by DeBaas · · Score: 1

      hmm, and so many are complaining about Linux becoming a bit bloated as well ;-)

      --
      ---
  39. Ooo - do you know his shirt size? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I need to get him a birthday present.

  40. It wasn't just an interview by unapersson · · Score: 1

    They showed Click Online this morning (at about 5am). It's on BBC News 24 so I assume it's repeated several times. The whole program was basically dedicated to Linux, the Linus interview was just part of it. Probably about 20 minutes in all.

    If I didn't have a nasty stomach bug at the moment I would have missed it...

  41. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The threading makes it a little unclear if you were responding to me, but...

    The market is the market, and it responds to all the messages that are put out there. My point is not that RMS doesn't deserve the credit, a lot of credit. It's just that his personality works against him, and this is one of the ways that this happens. He's doing great work, and his initiative has taken off to the point that it has a life of its own. Arguing about who deserves what part of the credit is unseamly, whether or not you are stealing someone else's thunder. If credit is really that important to RMS, and is suspect it isn't, then he should take the feedback and adjust to it. Since he probably doesn't actually care that much about this kind of recognition, he should just bask in the glory of his accomplishments and keep being who he is. The mainstream will always be reluctant to fully accept an RMS type, but it doesn't matter because his fans know how it really is.

  42. Dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Instead it is more likely that Microsoft will become like IBM - "still huge but not the dominant force anymore", he said."

    Because of Linux? Dream on Linus.

    1. Re:Dream on by FooBarWidget · · Score: 2

      He never said that it will happen because of Linux. Dream on coward.

    2. Re:Dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, he didn't offer any other explanation, so I guess he was just blowing smoke.

  43. one sinero. by gimpboy · · Score: 3, Interesting


    a company wants program X to preform a task. they preform a cost analysis and it would cost M dollars to purchase this program from commercial company Y. There is a Free, F, (in the gnu sense) program that would do alot of what they want, but not all. It would cost N dollars to add that functionality. if N M then company X can hire a programmer or use exsisting staff to pay someone to add those features.

    if company X wishes to distribute those changes they have to provide the source code. if they just want to use it internally, they dont have to distribute their changes.

    right now there is a HUGE codebase of Free software to build on. if it's cheaper to build on Free software than it is to purchase commerical software, then free software can be developed and programmers can still make money.

    --
    -- john
    1. Re:one sinero. by gimpboy · · Score: 1

      oops the filter took out my less than's it should have read:

      if N < M then company X can hire a programmer or use exsisting staff to pay someone to add those features.

      --
      -- john
  44. Direct links with mplayer by Guiri · · Score: 1

    You can watch it with mplayer and win32 codec libraries:

    mplayer -cache 100 'http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCWorld/Fil e/worl_Click031002_interview_isdn.asx?Media=7067'

    (for ISDN first part). These are the rest of the links:

    First part:

    56k
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCWor ld/File /worl_Click031002_interview_56.asx?Media=7065

    isdn
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCWo rld/File /worl_Click031002_interview_isdn.asx?Media=7067

    cable
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCW orld/File /worl_Click031002_interview_cable.asx?Media=7066

    Second part:

    56k
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCWor ld/File /worl_Click031002_interview2_56.asx?Media=7062

    isdn
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBCWo rld/File /worl_Click031002_interview2_isdn.asx?Media=7064

    cable:
    http://STREAM.SERVSTREAM.COM/ViewWeb/BBC World/File /worl_Click031002_interview2_cable.asx?Media=7063

  45. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by LMCBoy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think you're right, RMS really doesn't care about fame or recognition...he definitely does not seem the type to worry about stuff like that.

    I seem to remember reading that the real reason RMS is so pedantic on the "GNU/Linux" thing is that he's afraid that Linux might slip away from the high ideals of Free Software to the amoral pragmatism of Open Source. This would be a real tragedy, if it occurred. However, I don't know how likely it is. I really can't imagine a non-GPL fork of the kernel.

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  46. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by rbrander · · Score: 1

    I think everybody understands that this is a bit like the Panama Canal -- virtually all 6 million cubic yards of earth excavated by the French; then the Americans came in when the project was in collapse and finished up the last 10% of the work, and reaped nearly 100% of the reward.

    Can anybody explain in words of one syllable why the crucial closing of the loop, the final cherry on top that made the whole thing work, the kernel itself, eluded the GNU programmers? If they were such amazingly great coders, why was Mr. Torvalds able to do what they didn't? You'd think they'd have done that *first*...

  47. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember reading that the real reason RMS is so pedantic on the "GNU/Linux" thing is that he's afraid that Linux might slip away from the high ideals of Free Software to the amoral pragmatism of Open Source.

    If he does not like Torvald's kernal, then he can write a GNU one. What's the holdup? BSD?

    RMS is a troll: not because he is wrong, but because he is annoying. (Hey, I can relate WRT OO bashing).

  48. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I really can't imagine a non-GPL fork of the kernel.

    I can imagine it, I just can't see it going anywhere. If you are interested in commercializing a UNIX flavor, BSD is the OS of choice because it is an Open != Free license. Darwin as sold as NeXT and now OSX is an obvious example.

    More likely is that some mergers between the HURD and Linux will occur, which will solidify the Linux kernel in the GPL camp. The point is that only if all of the copyright holders agree can the licensing be shifted. But, the Linux kernel has never been released except under GPL, so maybe it isn't even possible. In the beginning when there was only a handful of participants, maybe the kernel itself could have been released under another copyright (in addition to GPL), and maybe Linus could attempt to do this himself even. But why would he? This kind of action would rightly be seen as divisive, and would destroy the community's trust.

    In other words, even if it was possible, it would not impact much because no one would be interested. If a Linux/Hurd merger occurs, it is no longer possible because at least the Hurd part would have to be removed first.

    A seperate topic, but I think a merger is the most likely outcome because I'm sure there are good an worthy modules in both kernels, and the community is after the best.

  49. sing along by linucs · · Score: 1

    [musichetta cazzuta]

    we're leaving together,
    but still it's faaarewell!
    and maybe we'll come back... ... to windows, who can tell?

    i guess there is no one to blaaame... ...we're leaving windows!!
    will things ever beee the same agaaain? ...
    IT'S THE WOODY COUNTDOWN!!

    [musichetta arrabbiata]

    we're apt-getting debian[0], and still we stand taaall!
    'cause maybe they've seen us... and welcome us aaall!
    with so many apt-gets to dooo, and things to be fooound!
    i'm sure that we won't miss bill, 'causeee... ...
    IT'S THE WOODY COUNTDOWN!!

    [altra musichetta arrabbiata]

    [0] debian/gnu/linux

    --
    -- free software from the top of xiaodong mountain
  50. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by srussell · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The GNU/Linux beef is one thing (language is inaccurate; koala bears aren't really bears), but calling Linus "the inventor of the Linux operating system" is about like crediting NT to the team that wrote KERNEL32.DLL.

    No, calling Linus "the inventor of the Linux operating system" is like calling Bill Gates "the inventor of MS Windows." Linus probably contributed more code to his project than Bill did to his, but their most important contributions were similar in nature.

    In both situations, it is less important who wrote the code than who was the central motivating factor in the creation of the phenomenon. Bill Gates did it through shrewd (amoral?) business practices; Linus did it by motivating people to contribute. However he did it, Linus was the binding glue that has propelled Linux to where it currently is.

    As you said, most of the codebase is there. You imply that the kernel is almost a trivial aspect of the OS... so where is the Gnu OS that exists outside of Linux? Hurd is pretty old... why isn't anybody running it? Why is Linux more popular than BSD? Why is it more popular than any other well designed OS?

    Linus motivates people; he's a cult of personality that encourages cooperation and construction. RMS's cult of personality is of a different, more evangelical sort, which hasn't, and doesn't, encourage people to join in. This is probably because RMS's motivations are morally dogmatic, where as Linus's are practical/hedonistic. You can be a communist and like Linux, but you don't have to.

    So, I believe it is entirely reasonable (if not fair) to credit Linus with the creation of Linux. Even if he hadn't written a single line of code, and yet had otherwise done for Linux what he has, he'd still be able to claim that title. This all by the basic fact that without Linus, there would have been no Linux as we know it, no matter how much code Gnu churned out.

  51. it's his own fault by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 3, Insightful

    RMS is reaping the results of his own decisions. If he was concerned with public perception of the free software movement, he should have made more pragmatic decisions that would have yielded more favorable publicity, but he didn't.

    He could have given his project a catchy and descriptive name that people would naturally associate with a movement about freedom. Instead he chose an obscure name like GNU that no one knows how to pronounce (or really wants to once they do).

    He could have worked on writing a simple yet fully functional monolithic kernel, which would have been a quick way to finish the off a basic GNU system. Instead he chose a design so apparently complicated that it still is not usable even though they had a one-year head start on Linux!

    He could have adopted Linux as part of the GNU system (after all, it's always been GPL even if FSF don't own the copyright). He could have pursued making Debian an official GNU distribution which would have given him the authority to call it a GNU system. However the FSF stopped funding Debian after November 1995.

    He could have found some graceful way to seek credit for his contribution to Linux distributions. Instead he came up with the abomination known as "GNU/Linux" (pronounced guh-noo slash linux -- you're supposed to pronounce the slash!) He continually wonders why no one (except the Debian people) is interested in
    perpetuating this offense against what little dignity is left in American English.

    And now he's upset that he gets no credit, no recognition, no acknowledgement of his ideals in the mainstream media. Well he probably should be upset, but only at himself for his lack of pragmatism.

    1. Re:it's his own fault by gli · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Pushing your ideals is not asking for credit. The latter is selfishness. But RMS is the former.

  52. geeze what a fat fuck.. by ftg888 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    its nice to see that the california diet is improving linus shape....what a fat bastard he has become in 2 years in the usa... oh well.... whats next l. torvalds dead of heart attack from a MICKBURGER... ...

    1. Re:geeze what a fat fuck.. by the_real_tigga · · Score: 1

      well, at least he shaved...

      --
      my .sig is better than yours.
  53. Re:the BBC are not "decent" by andrewbaldwin · · Score: 1

    And how much do we pay for "free" TV? - you don't think that the advertisements appear gratis (free as in beer) do you? Someone pays for the creative team, the account execs, the accountants at the TV station, the ad agency, the product being hawked... then there's the lawyers.

    And don't even think of the "free as in speech" argument - no commercial station in the world is going to criticise its major sponsors; very few will dare to put out programmes with a small target audience because the advertisers won't like it. There's an implicit censorship from big business, just as insidious as any government interference.

    I watch very little commercial TV in the UK because, compared with the BBC it's generally (not always) poorer quality and driven to the lowest common denominatior / aimed at the highest market share (to gain advertising revenue).

    You may carp at the licence fee if you watch little or no BBC output, that's your choice - I don't go around bad mouthing the supermarkets and the various products on offer, demanding that they reduce their prices by the percentage spent on adverts I don't watch.

  54. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by LMCBoy · · Score: 2

    If he does not like Torvald's kernal, then he can write a GNU one. What's the holdup? BSD?

    He *does* like the Linux kernel, I think...that's why he's trying to keep it Free. And GNU *is* working on their own kernel: the HURD. It's been in development a long time. I do not know what the holdup is, but I can't imagine it has anything to do with BSD, which is a completely independent, non-GNU project.

    RMS is a troll: not because he is wrong, but because he is annoying. (Hey, I can relate WRT OO bashing).

    Whether he's annoying or not, I don't think you can really call him a troll. A troll is someone who says divisive or combative statements that they don't really believe, just to induce a flamewar.

    Say what you want about RMS, but I don't think anyone would agree that he doesn't Really Believe what he says.

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  55. Cable TV is not "decent" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cable TV is not decent. They're funded by a fee that cable viwers have to pay for whether they watch every channel or not.

    The Cable TV companies say this allows them to show quality programmes with fewer adverts, but then they do show adverts *every five minutes*.

    Every year thousands of people go to prison because they cannot afford to pay their cable TV bill.

  56. You will never see Bill Gates wearing... by ashitaka · · Score: 2

    cheap white sport socks and no shoes during an interview.

    --
    If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
  57. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes , rms wants some credit, but I think that is
    secondary.
    The reason he wants to empahasize the gnu in
    linux is so people will understand that it is the
    gnu ideals that have wrought in good part the
    wonderful thing that is Linux.
    so that they will remember what made linux possible, ( along with Linus, and the Internet, of
    course) and keeps it from being absorbed like
    BSD ( the lousy license ).
    He is hoping that when you think of Linux, you
    will think of gnu (gpl et al) and what it stands for. ... and see what it has wrought.

  58. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Tablizer · · Score: 0, Troll

    (* A troll is someone who says divisive or combative statements that they don't really believe, just to induce a flamewar. *)

    I don't think that is the common use. It generally means a "pest" who is hellbent to get their opinion across.

    In that sense RMS *is* a troll.

    BTW, the tuxedo.org jargon link you gave seems to have problems. Tux is sick?

  59. donwload & view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use mms_client to download it and the use mplayer with the Win32 codecs

    Anyone knows about a better mms downloader?
    Streaming sucks!

  60. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by extrasolar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "In both situations, it is less important who wrote the code than who was the central motivating factor in the creation of the phenomenon."

    Please, don't bullshit. There are a lot of motivating factors for writing free software, from ESR's cathedral and the bazaar to the freeing of mozilla to just the simple fact on how much Windows sucked at the time. Giving Linus undue credit in this regard is merely dishonest.

    ".... This is probably because RMS's motivations are morally dogmatic, where as Linus's are practical/hedonistic. You can be a communist and like Linux, but you don't have to."

    First, look up dogmatic and see if that is really what you mean.

    Second, read this from here:

    To provide more freedom in software development and to serve as an institution where knowledge can be exchanged are the two most pronounced purposes of the OS/FS community, followed by the provision of more variety of software and by support for innovations, which are very similar items. Thus, we witness a clear coherence with the otherwise mentioned motives and orientations, the strong interest in skill improvements and a strong wish for a large variety of software products, which apparently is considered as a value itself. It is noteworthy that all material or hedonistic interests are clearly outplayed by these items.

    Read the rest of the study itself here. What they found is that most people who write free software do it for the "dogmatic" reasons Linus seems to despise so much. Certainly, its not an overwhelming majority--but the point stands: without RMS, free software would not be anywhere near as important or complete, nor have as many developers, as it has today.

    Not that even a majority of these people agree with RMS in every way. But, for a movement to sustain itself, there needs to be something more than a "cult of personality". There needs to be something real to work towards--a lofty goal.

    I suppose I should stop here. The study really should speak for itself. But there is no doubt in my mind, no matter how unpopular it may seem, credit is certainly due.

  61. Real Media direct link to the programme by alister.b · · Score: 1

    Interview with Linus is 5 minutes into the program.
    (pnm://rm.bbc.net.uk/news/olmedia/cta/progs/02/cli ck_online/03oct.rm)

    --
    --
    1. Re:Real Media direct link to the programme by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 2

      Someone mod up the parent. While the hyperlink is mangled, the hand-typed URL indeed works with RealPlayer and displays a modest but watchable 34Kbps stream.

      (pnm://rm.bbc.net.uk/news/olmedia/cta/progs/02/c li ck_online/03oct.rm)

      The Linus-at-home interview starts 5 minutes into the program (and ends at around 18 mins) but even before that there's a cute BBC-style preview of Linux.

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

  62. Tux is pregnant by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2

    Yes, we're all very surprised.

  63. linus is a fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    linus lied when he made up numbers about how many linux users there were. he even admitted this in a Usenix BOF in front of hundred of spectators.

    linus also claimed how much better linux was, when in fact, linux is nothing new. he just ripped off the SYSV api and copied a lot of stuff from BSD and MINIX. The truth is linux is not stable and not very advanced. The kernel code is full of ugly hacks. linus should be denounced as a fraud and a cheater.

  64. Thanks, Linus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just like reading fluff stuff like this because it makes me happy to know a bit about the guy who made the awesome OS I am using while I write this. All the best techs I know use Linux, because it is better; because it does what they tell it to; because it is so useful and versatile; and because if you know how, Linux makes doing things well easier than those "other" OSes.

    Today I was adding some IP address range scopes to an NT 4 DHCP server. It was easy enough and it worked, but I had to reboot the server about seven times, just because I couldn't find the service to restart it after changes. My coworker and I were commenting how it would be so much easier to just "/usr/sbin/dhcpd restart" (or wherever the executable lives).

    Thanks again, Linus.

    1. Re:Thanks, Linus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All the best techs I know use Linux ..."

      You need to get out more.

    2. Re:Thanks, Linus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you Linus because you are a goddam fucking moron? Well if it keeps idiots like you out of my Windows server room I'm all for it. Yay Linus!

  65. I stopped reading the article after this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Mr Torvalds enjoys the notoriety he has achieved as the man that challenged the Microsoft empire with his open source alternative operating system.

    This article was obviously written by a "dime a dozen" moron. Linux is not a fucking operating system. REPEAT AFTER ME. Linux is not an operating system, Linux is a kernel.

    Linux is not an OS, Linux is a kernel.

    Oh well, maybe someone who is an actual user of Linux will make a good interview someday.

    1. Re:I stopped reading the article after this: by vegetablespork · · Score: 1

      So what constitutes an operating system? More importantly, what good is an operating system without a kernel. Now what good is a kernel without an operating system? Seems like the GNU folk are a bit bitter that they had no kernel.

      --

      Call (206) 338-5780 COLLECT for information about a genuine BA, BS, MA, MS, MBA, or Ph.D.

  66. Of Course..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's lots of bloat nowadays when distributed in just about any media.

  67. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Chops · · Score: 1

    If I were the GNU people, I wouldn't be working that hard on the HURD; there's already a perfectly functional GPLed kernel, so getting another one done simply isn't a high priority.

    Also, GNU software has a reputation for being overdesigned and bloated with features; the HURD, I'm sure, is no exception, whereas Linux is massively underdesigned (it's been getting a lot better recently, but some of the in-kernel APIs are still disgusting.) The shocking thing would be if the HURD didn't take a lot longer than Linux to develop.

  68. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by srussell · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Please, don't bullshit. There are a lot of motivating factors for writing free software,

    No bullshit. There is a conspicuous absence of a popular non-Linux Gnu distribution. This is the only proof I need to show that Linus, not RMS, was the motivating force behind Linux. Furthermore, I believe that even had Gnu never existed, Linux would still have come into being, and would have gained as much popularity as it now has. This is, obviously, pure conjecture on my part, but I think it is an opinion formed from a reasonable extrapolation of the history of Linux.

    First, look up dogmatic and see if that is really what you mean.

    dogÂma
    n. pl. dogÂmas or dogÂmaÂta (-m-t)
    1. A doctrine or a corpus of doctrines relating to matters such as morality and faith, set forth in an authoritative manner by a church.
    2. An authoritative principle, belief, or statement of ideas or opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true.
    3. A principle or belief or a group of them

    Yup. It means exactly what I think it means.

    Linus tends to keep high politics (as opposed to interpersonal politics) out of what he does. RMS does just the opposite; from the GPL to his public statements, everything is shaded in politics, ethics, and dogma. This makes Linus easier to work with, because he isn't preaching at you. Again, you can agree with something, and still not want to have it shoved down your throat. I support PBS, but I treat their fundraisers just like any other telemarketter if I receive unsolicited calls.

    As far as crediting contributors, I agree. The question is: at what point is a contribution considered significant enough to warrent high-level credit? Should we start calling it "Kerningham/Richie/Gnu/Linux"? K&R have made much more of a contribution to Linux than either Gnu or Linus. Maybe Gentoo should be called "Python/Gentoo", because so much of what defines Gentoo is Portage, which is a Python app.

    This message was not run through a spell checker, including my own brain.

  69. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Chops · · Score: 2

    It's not that RMS "doesn't like" Linux, it's that he and the FSF deserve credit for writing pretty much all of the OS people call "Linux" (except the kernel and XFree86.)

    It may well be that GNU's style (overblown, bloated with features, overdesigned) may be the 100% wrong way to build a kernel; we'll see.

  70. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by rbrander · · Score: 1

    Well, certainly, the HURD is a low-priority now, >10 years after the Linux kernel was done.

    But, 12 years ago, why did they work only on support programs of various sorts and so slowly on the central One Ring to Rule them All? It's as if a group of talented mechanics puttered away on a car project and perfected the glove compartment and brakes and reclining seats while putting in no time on the *engine*... ...and Torvald's project showed that one keener could have knocked off "rough consensus and running code" in a man-year.

    So, OK, the better-designed and over-designed HURD would presumably have taken 3 man-years, but I don't get why there weren't two guys working on it from 1988 to 1990 and done before Mr. Torvalds.

  71. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by Chops · · Score: 1

    My point is that "rough consensus and running code" is anathema to the GNU project's philosophy; they'd rather have it done slow and clean than quick and dirty (especially when quick-and-dirty was already available -- it'd have wasted effort that went into Gnome, Gnumeric, and Gimp instead.)

    Also, a lot more than a man-year went into Linux before it was usable -- if you say it was usable at 1.0 (reasonable for a Unixy OS, not so much for a Windows competitor), then three years went by between Linus' famous c.o.m announcement (25 Aug 1991) and 1.0's release (13 Mar 1994) -- and if you check through 1.0's CREDITS, you find quite a few names besides Linus's. head `find . -name '*.c' | scram` | less(*) showed Biro, Hannu Savolainen, Orest Zborowski, Biro again, Fred Kempen, Biro again, and then Linus in the copyright notices the first time I ran it on a 1.0 tree.

    (*) scram is a locally-written script that randomly permutes the lines of its input. Let me know if you want a copy (or if you know a Unix-standard equivalent I should have used instead :-)

  72. Re:OT: Re:Can you imagine RMS giving the interview by extrasolar · · Score: 2

    "No bullshit. There is a conspicuous absence of a popular non-Linux Gnu distribution. This is the only proof I need to show that Linus, not RMS, was the motivating force behind Linux."

    Bullshit. There is a conspicuous absence of popular non-GNU Linux distributions too. There isn't a point either way. That doesn't saying anything about motivating factors, either.

    As far as "dogma," it just means a set of beliefs, any set of beliefs. Unless you want to consider GNU a religion, then you're just being childish.

    "As far as crediting contributors, I agree. The question is: at what point is a contribution considered significant enough to warrent high-level credit?"

    This is as much bullshit too. What you are really arguing is for no name whatsoever. You're saying there is no one worthy enough to get to decide the name. Thats bullshit, we need to name the system something.

    Somehow you think that the kernel is significant enough to warrant be the name of the operating system as a whole, while the GNU system isn't. The FSF take the opposite stance: that GNU is a primary contribution to the system and that Linux and all the other applications and services are secondary contributions.

    There are a lot of valid reasons why this makes sense. I think it'd be a waste of time to go into these here, but if you want I'll go through them.

    But I think the larger point is why people don't like GNU. It has nothing to do with logic really, its about how people feel. Some people just really don't like RMS--for both legitemate and illegitemate reasons. Some people are *really* fond of Linus as the posterboy, and believe that he should get the credit for "inventing the operating system" [sic]. In that respect, its simply a popularity contest. But the most important reason, I think, is that they don't understand what RMS is shooting for. Linus does, but has rejected it. Perens groks it, and is trying to get the media to pick up on it. Raymond gets it, but I think he sees it as a challenge to his ego. But all three of these hackers are way ahead of you.

    The Free Software Philosophy is Stallman's, its all his. Not everyone agrees with it but a lot of very talented hackers have picked up on parts of it--but don't take it to the extreme that Stallman does. This is just as well, since taking any philosophy to an extreme is pretty crazy. But saying the philosophy itself isn't important is a severe understatement.

    But if you don't understand it, what people who believe in it do may seem mystical to you. Heck, to Bill Gates opening source code seems mystiscal. So you'll find yourself galloping around calling GNU a religion doctrine. But please, put it in context. If the philosophy is wrong, criticize it. Its funny, after almost two decades of bashing GNU I haven't seen any real critisms on the GNU philosophy itself. All I see is people trumpetting ignorance around.

    Really, y'all can do better than that.

  73. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

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