Archive for the ‘Interviews’ Category

Torvalds: No picnic to become major Linux coder

Monday, August 18th, 2008

In an interview with ZDNet Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, talks about the adversities of becoming a Linux kernel developer.  Among other things, he advises new contributors to “start small” by sending “trivial patches”.

“It’s definitely not easy to become a ‘big contributor’,” wrote Torvalds. “For one thing, the kernel is quite complex and big, and it inevitably simply takes time to learn all the rules — not just for the code, but for how the whole development environment works. Similarly, for a new developer, it will take time before people start recognising the name and start trusting the developer to do the right things.”

However, Torvalds argued that Linux kernel processes do make it easy to contribute small patches.

“[We] make it fairly easy for people to ease into kernel development,” wrote Torvalds. “It seems to be working too. We literally have thousands of people with patches attributed to them in each release.”

ZDNet [via Slashdot]

IBM VP: Office OpenXML a dead end, Microsoft will back ODF

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

In an interview with Ars Technica, Bob Sutor, IBM’s vice president of open source and standards, reveals that he believes that Microsoft’s OOXML format will die off, regardless of the outcome of the ISO appeals process.

He is convinced that the industry will regard OOXML as a dead end, and that will force Microsoft to accept ODF. We have already seen some evidence of this in Microsoft’s recent decision to support ODF in Office—a change of heart that was precipitated by pressure from ODF adopters. Sutor suspects that this trend will continue and that Microsoft will eventually fully embrace ODF.

Ars Technica

Sun: We screwed up on open source

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

In an interview with Builder AU Sun’s chief open source officer Simon Phipps admits that they “screwed up” with open source in 2001/2002.

“All [open source developers] can remember is what happened in 2001/2002 when, to be quite frank with you, we screwed up. We alienated a large group of open source developers by the attitudes we had of the community back then,” said Phipps.

Phipps says that Sun has since tried to remedy the situation with the “open sourcing Solaris, Java, the application server Glassfish, NetBeans and the rest of the portfolio.”

See Builder AU for a video of the interview.

Builder AU [via Slashdot]

Open Source Killing Commercial Developer Tools

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

“The tools market is dead. Open source killed it,” or so claims John de Goes.

The only commercial development tools that can survive today are the ones that leapfrog open source tools. With UNA Collaborative Edition, we have that—there’s nothing for real-time collaborative development that even comes close, whether commercial or open source. But UNA Personal Edition is more of an incremental improvement on what’s out there in the editing world.

DZone [via Slashdot]

Ubuntu Netbook Remix Details

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Canonical recently unveiled its version of Ubuntu for sub-notebooks, Ubuntu Netbook Remix (UNR).  Laptop magazine has an interesting interview with Gerry Carr, marketing manager at Canonical, on the new Atom-powered OS.

I would say that the highlights are

  • a boot time of 5-10 seconds
  • UNR will only be available pre-installed
  • UNR will not be available as a ready ISO for end users, rather it is meant for OEMs
  • OEMs can customize the UI, if they wish.

Read the full article for more.

Laptop [via Slashdot]


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