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Tridgell and Samba Recognized

An anonymous reader writes "It's official, Samba creator Andrew Tridgell is Australia's smartest man... in IT anyway. He's received Bulletin magazine's 'Smart 100' award for the IT sector. He's also written about how Samba came into being, which was basically because he was trying to avoid doing any real work on his PhD. He also tells us how he discovered Linux and why he believes Open Source Software is superior to proprietary code... He also talks about rsync and his plans for the future..."

6 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. FIRST BUSH POST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Duh. Bush is bad. Bush suckxz. Duh. I am 31337. Bush is duh bad duh.

  2. HERE'S A SUGGESTION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    MESSY PAINFUL SUICIDE

  3. Re:FIRSTY POST! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Fuck you, you hitler-stalinist!

  4. I am GOD of the free world. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Violets are blue
    Oh my, lump in the bed
    How I've missed you.
    Roses are redder
    Bluer am I
    Seeing you kissed by that charming French guy.
    The dogs and the cat, they missed you too
    Barney's still mad you dropped him, he ate your shoe
    The distance, my dear, has been such a barrier
    Next time you want an adventure, just land on a carrier


    FUCK EVERYONE out there... Democracy?!? BAH!
    Money to all my buddies! Contracts to all of the VP buddies! FUCK EVERYONE ELSE!

  5. Re:WOMEN SUCK! by Doomrat · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't know if this is a random repeated troll post, as I don't often browse Slashdot unfiltered. But anyway, stuff like that is a real headfuck. That's why I find myself mostly attracted to nice girls who prefer snuggling first and sex later, and aren't always looking for a better model (though I'm not sure they exist). I've never been in a relationship where I wasn't eventually traded in for somebody else. I could easily say that women suck, but clearly it's me who is teh sux0r. Just wander on lonely and pathetic forever, or go for the first desperate fat hag who wanders along. Life is shitty, don't expect anything better.

  6. I find his argument somewhat strange. by airrage · · Score: 1, Troll

    I am not an OS zealot. I enjoy the sunshine too much to worry about media drivers and file systems. However, Mr. Tridgell makes several comments I find incongruous:

    First, he talks about his first attempt at Samba, "It really wasn't a very good piece of code, and it certainly wasn't very reliable, but the important thing is that I then decided to release it to the world for free.".

    So from this, it would seem he would be arguing that it was bad code, written sloppily; but that released into the "wild" so to speak, it would return a better thing. I assume much like the peer review / criticism so normal in academia. Okay, I think I'm with him there.

    Next, Mr. Tridgell talks about proprietary software and states, "We now have large numbers of programmers reinventing poorly designed bits of software, most of which will eventually be discarded and lost forever."

    So, it's the "proprietaries" as I will not call them that only write bad code? Didn't he just suggest that his first attempt was poorly written. Or maybe he's arguing that it's continually poor no matter how many times it's re-written.

    Finally, he states, "At the moment I'm working on Samba version 4, which is a rather major rewrite..."

    It just seems to inconsistent. Bad code was sent out into the world and returned voila -- bad code. Why would Samba need a major re-write if the code weren't properly written in the first place? Isn't this just like a rewrite of Windows? It seems from his comments, that bad code won't be magically fixed in the world of open-source and I think it's not necessarily true that closed-source will just turn out garbage over-and-over again.

    What you could argue is that samba and all open-source derivatives are more micro-economic driven. That, in the end, might be a good thing.

    --
    "This isn't a study in computer science, its a study in human behavior"