Linus Torvalds: The mind behind Linux
In 1991, Linus Torvalds shared the Linux kernel with a few computer hobbyists. The operating system they built reshaped the software industry. Full bio
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a strange thing.
is in millions of computers,
Android devices out there.
single one of them.
software headquarters driving all this.
when I saw a picture of it.
doesn't look like much.
part in my office
on the walls are this light green.
they use that on the walls.
that really stimulates you.
you only see the screen,
about in my computer is --
and powerful, although I like that --
small data center at home,
boring office you'll ever see.
technology empire --
to the power of open source.
to understand open source
to the development of Linux.
as a collaborative project.
in a series of many projects
enjoyed programming.
we still have not reached.
that I was looking for a project on my own
really, on my radar at all.
you want to show off to people.
look at what I did!"
that great back then.
open source at that point.
but there was no intention
methodology that we think of today
on this for half a year,
of the open source --
"free software" back then --
to the notion that, hey,
licenses that had been around.
commercial interests coming in.
I think most people who start out have,
taking advantage of their work, right?
some code that you thought,
I would not have thought of that.
by people contributing code,
started contributing ideas.
takes a look at your project --
of other things, too,
takes an interest in your code,
give you feedback
for half my life, basically.
had been completely personal
just started commenting,
giving code back,
moments where I said,
people on email,
and get involved in my project.
when you saw what was being built
this actually could be something huge,
that I'm getting nice feedback on,
in the whole technology world"?
was not when it was becoming huge,
people being involved --
is not a big deal -- to me.
then it's a huge deal --
a single point where I went like,
that I talk to really credit you
for software development.
and your role in that.
or 100 people working on a project
where just on the kernel,
in every single release
roughly two or three months.
who make small, small changes.
you have to maintain it.
that do only source-code maintenance.
the most commonly used,
and refused to touch it
that was radical and interesting
who wanted to participate,
I was the kind of break point,
with thousands of people.
to maintain my first big project.
for something meaningful
has been something I needed
and Git kind of arose
to work with too many people.
LT: Yeah.
who's transformed technology
and understand why it is.
with a Rubik's Cube.
programming since you were like 10 or 11,
genius, you know, übernerd,
who could do everything?
the prototypical nerd.
in the Rubik's Cube
who's not in the picture,
like, a couple of cousins --
into the room she would say,
particularly exceptional.
was that I would not let go.
because that's interesting.
a geek and being smart,
let's do something else --
other parts in my life, too.
company, in Silicon Valley,
is that people jump between jobs
development of Linux itself,
you in conflict with other people.
the quality of what was being built?
a people person," --
to other people's feelings,
say things that hurt other people.
that I should be nice.
that maybe you're nice,
is we are different.
I'm particularly proud of,
I really like about open source
people to work together.
don't like each other.
very heated arguments.
you can find things that --
in really different things.
where I said earlier
taking advantage of your work,
quickly turned out,
were lovely, lovely people.
at all interested in doing,
that I just did not want to go.
source they could do it,
really beautifully together.
it works the same way.
the communicators,
and get you into the community.
was the make a pretty UI,
I'm trying to explain.
other trait that you have,
particularly good taste in code,
a singly-linked list.
good taste approach,
when you start out coding.
in a singly-linked list --
an existing entry from a list --
between if it's the first entry
the pointer to the first entry.
of a previous entry.
why it doesn't have the if statement,
a problem in a different way
a special case goes away
although, details are important.
I really want to work with
which is how ...
because it's too small.
seeing the big patterns
what's the right way to do things.
the pieces together here now.
to software people.
to some people here.
of these grand visions of the future.
uncomfortable at TED
of vision going on, right?
happy with all the people
and just staring at the clouds
and saying, "I want to go there."
that's right in front of me
about these two guys.
do you relate to them?
of cliché in technology,
scientist and crazy idea man.
their companies after him.
for being kind of pedestrian
and 99 percent perspiration."
grab these days,
of an Edison than a Tesla.
this week is dreams --
others have made, arguably,
out of your software.
for several reasons.
open source and really letting go thing,
I don't really enjoy, public talking,
this is an experience.
that make me a very happy man
fully realized now in the world,
works so well in code
and this is not done well.
room for arguments.
open politics and things like that --
principles in some other areas
turns into not just gray,
is making a comeback.
being pretty closed,
and some of that going on.
a comeback in science,
thank you for the Internet,
and revealing so much of yourself.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Linus Torvalds - Software engineerIn 1991, Linus Torvalds shared the Linux kernel with a few computer hobbyists. The operating system they built reshaped the software industry.
Why you should listen
Fascinated by the economy and elegance of experimental operating system Minix, computer scientist Linus Torvalds wrote an operating system kernel and shared it with independent programmers. The system that they fleshed out and released in 1994 -- Linux -- was remarkable not only for its utility and efficiency but also for the collaboration of its community.
Now enjoying mainstream respectability (and the support of the computer industry), Linux runs on the servers of Amazon, Google, and much of the wired world. As the sole arbiter of code for the Linux Foundation (which he characteristically downplays by saying “the only power I have is to say ‘no’”), Torvalds quietly inspires open-source projects worldwide.
Linus Torvalds | Speaker | TED.com