Linus Shares the Millennium Technology Prize
udas writes "The Millennium Technology Prize is awarded every two years for a technological innovation that significantly improves the quality of human life, today and in the future. This year, Linus Torvalds, Linux's creator, and Dr. Shinya Yamanaka, maker of a new way to create stem cells without the use of embryonic stem cells, are both laureates for the 2012 Millennium Technology Prize. This prize, which is determined by the Technology Academy of Finland, is one of the world's largest such prizes with candidates sought from across the world and from all fields of technology. The two innovators will share over a million Euros. The final winner will be announced by the President of the Republic of Finland in a special ceremony on June 13, 2012."
I think the fix was on.
in the summary
The first to write a Unix like operating system?
The first to write a free Unix like operating system?
The first to use a penguin as a mascot for an operating system.
Innovation.
Congratulations Mr. Torvalds and Mr. Yamanaka, well done!
Well deserved.
Well deserved *slowclap*
Best wishes to you and your family, and Linux! :)
You're using slashdot, aren't you? What you think it runs on?
Wait. Maybe the "improves quality of human life" needs to be rethought...
...and may I ask, from what OS is linux cloned from? as far as I new, he wrote it -based- on the minix kernel...
sorry, "knew"
The Millennium Technology Prize is awarded ever two years
Wouldn't that make it "The Biennial Technology Prize?"
Hello?
I'm willing to bet the stem cell researcher has used Linux on her research. The myriad things Linux is used for is what makes it so important. The fact that Flash does not work on your computer is just one of the many good things Linux has brought us.
And how is Linux a "technology innovation" ? I could barely even install it a few times (and probably could not install it or get it to work more than a few times). I propose that the next award should go to Bill Gates for the Windows Installer (which I probably used a thousand times to install and deploy a working Windows OS).
Am I getting it right, that plug&play and other features of Windows which simplify users' lives are NOT innovation, but editing config files, compiling drivers (after editing the source to include that certain device id) and whatnot, ARE innovations ?
Does this mean that it's finally the year of Linux on the stem cell?
Why wouldn't Stallman, who kept software as the open, available and academic exercise that is modeled on the principles of Science not get any recognition at the same time as Linus? Are you all on Minix/Linux or BSD/Linux? Is there some punch-bowl turd not using Linux on anything that wants to chime in knowing that portion of the comment wasn't directed at them?
And, of course...HAPPY HOLIDAYS!
"Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum
None of the things you describe have anything to do with Linux.
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Linux wasn't the first free and open Unix workalike but is hugely significant. git wasn't the first DVCS but is hugely significant. By 2014 "fork me with Git!" will be the banner on every digital artifact with a permissive license. That's more significant than even Linux and Linus will be deservedly back collecting more prizes.
One programmer creating both a product and a tool is just spectacular, but it's not unheard of. Andrew Tridgell (Australia's smartest human) created Samba and co-created rsync, and in interviews he's said the latter is more significant. And Bill Joy wrote much of BSD Unix and the vi editor. The trifecta would be inventing program, tool, and language, won by James Gosling for NeWS (the under-appreciated PostScript client-server "Network extensible Window System"), Gosling Emacs (with its mockLisp extension language) and of course Java.
=S
Next year the prize goes to creators of Anrgy Birds? It's also created in Finland.
Michael Grätzel, for example, is just as much as an insufferable cockwad as Dickie Stallman.
"Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum