The actual legend is Richard Stallman who is the true inventor of the operating system most people refer to as "Linux". This operating system is actually called GNU. What Linus Torvalds created was a OS kernel, which is only one peace of the huge puzzle that an operating system is.
@@joshuatharakan3687 It's not the main part at all measured by amount of code. Actually, there's no main part in an OS. It's like saying that an engine is the main part of a car. There's no main part in a car because each part is completely useless without the rest of the car. It's the same with an OS, there's no main part in an OS. If you remove one essential part, you don't have a functioning OS.
@@joshuatharakan3687 You lost yourself there. The transmision is what connects the engine to the wheels. Without the transmission or the axles or the wheels, you don't have a functioning car. Without a heart you don't have a functioning body. No essential component in a system is more important than another. Without an essential component, the system doesn't work, period. Please stop arguing. Your vague concept of "most important part" is illusory. There's no such a thing.
@@joshuatharakan3687 You are not even trying to discuss the subject of this comment thread. You've lost yourself in trying to defend your idea of "most important part".
Lol, when I was little I used to do that with the light switches, when I would balance it close enough it would fizzle, never did it around my parents because I thought I would get in trouble
He may not be a billionaire and famous like Musk,Bezos, Gates, Steve. But he is the most respected guy among techies. No money can buy that. We love you Linus ❤
@@unixlonix wouldn't "I love you Linus" be more of a personal position? talking for others is a sign of a talker feeling him or herself weak is social regard ;-)
@@M12Howitzer- He is as weak as you. His use of "we" includes those who agree with him. If you don't include yourself in this context, then responding in an offensive way makes you look weak. From this point of view, it is nothing more than a response written to say "I am separate, I am not one of you, I am different."
This ted talk was unlike any other 1. Not a man with vision 2. Not a man with big dreams 3. Not a man who is successful by selling products. A true "Dark Knight"
Linus made the kernel, not an "OS". GNU existed before the Linux kernel. It was a project to create an "OS" that was based on free software (not as price but as usage). The project was missing a kernel, a centeral way to manage the hardware and software. (Would look up definition of a kernel for better understanding). As a bad metaphor, Linus created the drive chain for a car that was already mostly built.
The host was trying to present him as a heroic figure, a dreamer with a vision because that’s more inspiring and perhaps more entertaining to the audience. But no, Linus has normal values just like the majority of us and he feels genuinely happy about it.
That's the hosts entire approach, to make you think exactly that. I'm actually very impressed. Some hosts genuinely try to describe people that way in order to present the guest in a 'heroic' light, this host wants you to think "huh, that host doesn't get how humble Linus is".
I like what the host did there. He didn't ask stupid question and was respectful. Yet, his approach to ask questions from the other end of the "heroic spectrum" tickled Linus to position himself and give the audience a bigger insight on who he is and how he's ticking.
@@drygordspellweaver8761 Their software completed each other, the Linux Kernel and GNU OS. Although I would credit Stallman for the philosophical movement in regards to free/ libre software.
I think there are a lot of people, who thinks like him : If I have a problem which a computer can solve, I tend to think: Maybe I should spend a few days to make this tool, which job I could do in a couple of minutes, and have to do it again and again an uncountable amount of times.
@@Shanboss277 they are called apple fanboys and windows fan boys. Also Tux is here to stop your device heat up by working too hard to help cool the environment. While windows just straight up heat the house.
@@momchilandonov What do you think your router runs? And on top of what OS do you think Java runs on most of these 5.5 billion devices? What do you think your smart TV runs as well (if you happen to have one)? You probably know the answer already.
@@artem.boldariev I am working in an ISP and worked with many cheap/expensive router vendors and generally they have their own OS. Sometimes some of the cheap ones are running on OS similar to Linux but not exactly Linux. Don't have a Smart TV :(. My point was that most computers are running on Windows as mostly Apple zombies buy Apple products. The smart people buy everything else - ASUS/HP/ACER etc. Apple is just mainstream in USA for some weird reason...
"I am not a visionary, i do not have a five year plan, i’m an engineer. I am perfectly fine with all the people who are walking around and just staring at the clouds and looking at the stars and say, i want to go there but i am looking at the ground and i want to fix the pot-hole that’s right in front of me before i fall in." -Linus Torvalds #LinusTorvalds #linux
It really is insane how he created Git, the most used VCS system in the world used in every Silicon Valley tech company and wrote it HIMSELF... and made it free and open source.
Especially because he had no other choice when it came to scaling. He dealt with merging code by EMAIL that is what impressed me. The guy creates stuff that is useful for him and gives it to other people if they need it too
100% Agree; its OK not to be a people person; even not to like people. The bar can be set lower and still result in a pleasant world. 'First, do no harm!'
nobel prize for chemistry, becouse programming because programming is nothing else then combining some stuff together nobel prize for health, becouse he cured cancer of dos/windows nobel prize for physics, because linux is about breaking big chunks of code into small particles nobel prize for literature, because code is some sort of literature nobel prize for piece, because he solved Apple vs. Microsoft war Nobel prize for economy for proving that free can be better than expansive (it's not all accurate, it's just joke)
FourthDerivative How do I get into “Linux”, please? That’s why I’m watching this video. Refer a good book or video. I don’t even know to begin to get it. Do I have to purchase a computer with it or what? Please and thanks much.
@ 17:08 "I’m perfectly happy with all the people who are walking around and just staring at the clouds and looking at the stars and saying, “I want to go there,” but I’m looking at the ground and I want to fix the pothole that’s right in front of me before I fall in. This is the kind of person I am" Aristotle gives his thanks.
what is funny that linus only wrote the core of linux everything else as been written by the members of the opensource community. That does makes linus a genious at all ... That does not prooves that linus have a programming talent ... That only prooves that he as been strategically and commercially present to aggretate the talent of guys in the opensource community who wrote the LINUX. Linux is not the product of linux torvalds, linux is the product of somes genious in this opensource community ! So lets put some justice here !
Anyone notice the difference in his confidence? The moment we have code on the slides, he switches from going through an interviewer and directly address the audience. Wonderful!
Timestamps: 00:13 - on Linux world headquoters (about organisation of calm workspace) 02:15 - on open-source (getting reviews of your code; interacring with other people) 06:08 - how Linux became a huge project 07:12 - role of Linus in Git 09:09 - Linus' character 14:18 - good taste in coding (rewriting programs to remove special cases) 16:39 - "I am not visionary, I am an engineer" 17:25 - on Tesla vs Edisson 18:50 - on why Linus doesn't bother, about other companies making millions of dollars 19:30 - about if Open-source idea fully realised in the world
Thank you man, the developer is a fucking genius, but he can't express himself very fluently as the interviewer does. And since I'm not a native speaker this timelapse helps me to get the idea of the interview
He is the most humble person I've seen in years, such a simple personality full of passion and none of the greed, especially greed. I like how he says "I'm doing fine, and thats enough" when was asked about other people making worlds money with his contribution to technology. A man that cannot get corrupted by money is the thing people should get inspired by. I'd be honored to share a couple teas with him.
He looks so uncomfortable out in public, yet sticks it out make a great and inspiring talk. And you could tell he'd rather be anywhere than talking in public right now. I recall that feeling. Still a legend
Linus brings up a point that I wish more people trying to get into programming miss, which is that the best way to make something great is to make something that is useful to you, that you need, if there is something you wish your computer could do then make that.
“I’m perfectly happy with people looking at the stars and saying ‘I want to go there’ but I’m an engineer. I’m looking at the ground and I want to fix the potholes right in front of me before I fall in” - Linus Torvaldes Although he said he’s not a people person like a zillion times, I feel I can listen to this genius all day
To me, I remember him saying: "I don't really like other people" which has a different meaning than what you wrote. And I believe his real words make your statement more powerful.
I think Linus does public speaking well on interviews rather than talks. Now that I think about it, I haven't watched a video of him giving a talk yet. Either way, hearing Linus' opinions is valuable in itself.
I've watched a few videos with Linus. What I appreciate, is he doesn't mince words, he says what's on his mind, and calls it as he sees it. He doesn't have to be "nice".
Just like Linus implied, different types of people are necessary. Both Wozniak and Jobs were necessary to make Apple a success because they both had skills that helped the company grow. We should not put people below other people just because we value their work less
Dragonvarine Did you ever read the book? Jobs was pretty important for the first GUI iteration. He may not have done coding work on it at that time, but why is that relev?
Yes I agree that Linus should get a Nobel prize. He is headstrong, yet selfless! He designs much better software than I thought! The example in this TED talk of bad code vs good code, totally makes sense. The if statement just makes the code more complex with extra processing and not enough documentation! The good code, the one he said had good taste, was much harder to envision but much more elegant and simplified which would reduce the processing, of the CPU, maybe to 50% to 75% of the processing time. And it had much better documentation! Linus's interview on TED talks, this video, makes me very much want to use Linux as my primary software! I want to know which Linux Distro he uses, and which one he recommends! I've used Linux before, from 2008 to 2012. Ubuntu. But when Debian incorporated FreeBSD Software I did not want to be with Debian based Distros anymore. I still don't want to be with FreeBSD Related software because it has a Demon as it's mascot, and that Daemon looks like a young devil. Which I totally do not like at all. I want to be with Heaven On Earth, and God, and Jesus, and Angels, not the devil. Which makes me wonder why there are Daemons in the Linux Distros. Could Linus and a dedicated group engineer those Demons into Angels instead, if they are good demons? Please let me know? And hopefully Linus will read this comment someday! He is a great man who gave away his possible copyright to allow for Free and Open Source software! Thank-you very much Linus! Christ Chalmers 2019 April 4 Thursday 6:14pm.
What a brilliant idea to have a really smart interviewer to prompt and moderate the usually reticent Linus Torvald. It brought out some different aspects of his personality, and where he's coming from, and made it quite enjoyable to listen to him without his ego getting so much in the way. I came away from this TED Talk appreciating much more Torvalds contributions to the world as it is today.
My 7+ year old laptop still works in a descent manner just because of Linux OS. Thank you so much for developing something that helps many. Especially for those who can't afford super computing specs.
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called Linux, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called Linux distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux!
What is amazing is my dad has worked with Linus Torvalds on a lot of the Linux and Git Projects. I mean half of the Suse Code is by my dad as he worked with the group on the original ideas.
How would your dad describe him? Is he the humblest guy i think or is it true that when Linus says "sometimes I'm not a nice person" ? Is he any frustrating to talk or work with?
“I’m perfectly happy with the people that walk around and look at clouds and the stars and say “I want to be there”, but I’m the one that’s looking at the ground and thinking “I’m going to fix that pot hole” So much to be learned from Linus, amazing.
@@Facebook-StevenSchmidlap actually carbon dioxide is not poisonous. Carbon monoxide is. Carbon dioxide just acts as a greenhouse gas causing global warming.
That guy is absolutely awesome! So great that you do not just show off the flashy extroverts with fancy presentations, but also have a man that makes calling yourself a nerd a badge of honour. And just how he uses an example of actually code (makes no sense to me), instead of only making sure that everyone in the word can understand it, makes me even more want to learn to code (when I have the time...). Thank you.
The second linked list remove() implementation can be understood with a good grasp of pointers and referencing and dereferencing operators. & is the reference operator and gives you the address (pointer) to a variable in RAM, * is the dereference operator which reverses the process and accesses the data in a pointer. The beauty of the 2nd implementation is that it recognizes that the pointer to the head and the variable holding that pointer are one in the same and a change in data in one will change the data in the other, and thus there is no need to check if it's the head.
There is no way to hate Linus even though he has yelled at us so many times in forums because que asked something silly. This guy is a living fucking legend and should get much more attention for everything his work has allowed us to achieve.
Mvuselelo Makhathini or maybe English is his third language. He’s translating to English with nuances ingrained in other languages and culture. One good example is translating any proverbs to other languages, there’s the cultural background to translate too, it might not possible be as a word by word translation to relay the whole context and meaning.
@@nadrile Pretty sure he just meant that he doesn't like people, perfectly understandable if you ask me. Also, he's Finnish, I'm Norwegian, in Scandinavian countries it's common to just say what you mean without all the courtesy phrasing some English speaking countries use. If we say "I don't like people" that means we don't like people and are not looking to change our minds about it, very straight forward and uncomplicated. Linus has no problem with the language barrier as he's very used to communicating in English. So I think you guys are just picking up on the cultural difference that we tend to think courtesy phrasing and polite small talk is dishonest and therefore the opposite of courteous, if you don't like us and don't want to talk to us we want you to tell us and not pretend like you do and waste our time.
Webservers, supercomputers, industrial robotics, driverless cars, smartphones, stock exchanges (NASDAQ/NYSE/CMX/DBG), the international space station, etc. are all running some form of the Linux kernel. A Finnish nerd has taken over the world.
You're absolutely right. If the companies would only go for the most advanced and technical superior product, the chances are high that most of them would be made proprietary. But they don't, the care about the software being free, alowing them to openly coloborate, adjust things as they need it and share their achievements with others. Being Free is the most important attribute in nowaday's UNIX world. Richard Stallman did important work for the community to realize that.
Not many people within the world of technology nowadays who act as utterly selfless as Linus, huge credit to the guy. If everybody could work like this we'd be superhumans in no time.
The people we hear about are rarely true tech people themselves. Musk, Gates, Jobs, ... They are all businessmen! Maybe businessmen with some education and experience in a tech related field, but not one of them got rich because he did significant work at the technical level himself
It's really interesting how Linus realized that, even being a strongly self-centered introvert, his projects could only grow up if he let other people join in. No matter how good you are at something, even if you're a genius: you'll need a lot of other people to make things work. I've seen this myself throughout life. Many of friends are brilliant in what they do, but not exceptionally recognized for that, professionally and financially speaking. On the other hand, the most successeful people are usually the ones who know how to deal with others and make them work together. Nowadays we're taught to work hard on ourselves, study overnight, acquire knowledge, learn loads of stuff, practice everyday and be as individually productive as humanly possible. But I hardly see anybody talking about how important it is to build relationships, be in touch with your team, find ways to cooperate and help each other. And Linus's example here is that it doesn't even mean you have to be an outgoing person or even be friends with anybody: you can find your own way to deal with that. Amazing interview!
lol come on man! you can't change a true introvert into a social butterfly. They will only put up with others for so long until they will get exhausted.
Ryan Bray Yes - this too is a myopia, but of the mind; assuming that others do or should think the same way you do, and to do otherwise is a problem or even a disease/malfunction.
All developers are different. You might prefer to work alone in a quiet environment while some other developers would prefer working in a crowded environment full of innovation and ideas.
Ryan Bray humans are social animals, most humans work better with others, Linus, you, me, and many others might not work well with others, but most people do!
could mean multiple tings. I'm guessing the "anti-visionary" perspective. However, you could also be talking about not giving speeches with their hands... hahahaha.
This man is real, he is sincere, when some big tech CEO speaks he just spouts marketing bs "we aim to bring people together", "we care", etc. Linus on the other hand is a real human without hidden agendas to grab more money for himself, he just goes "well I love people, but not in that way...I mean I'm not a people person...I like to program in in my bathrobe..." etc. he is just speaking his heart, saying what he loves to do, what he is and what he is not. He is not constantly scheming on how to have more money or be more powerful etc.
He is a pure programmer. He is not a marketer like Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg or Bill Gates. Never forget that marketers are not the ones who change the world in a positive way. Thank you so much for the wonderful legacy you left to the world.
This man is the kind of person who would serve in any context of public society (administrative, judicial, political ...) -Good -Fair -Unselfish -Serene -Ambitious for himself and for the place where he lives ... damn, it would take more men like Linus Torvalds.
I'm a Linux user but in my opinion his greatest work was git The next day if I can't use linux, I'd be fine. Upset, but fine. I'd switch to another os. But I can't imagine living without git. It has changed the way I write code essentially forever
Github has an impact beyond Linux, or Android into all kind of coding projects and application types. You may never have even touched a Linux machine but use it. Heck, I have even used to program my hub for my house and my wife has used if for scientific applications.
I did a workshop in computer network and was amazed to find that most of the internet (+80% sites and servers) use Linux... And it is mindblowing simple and works beautifully well. Better than Microsoft or Apple.
@Usman Rafique That bunch that your calling «low life» did and do very good work btw, in fact better work most of the time then the so-called pros. And they do other things you know, the kind that makes you think, take your time, use your brain. The suits that you seems to want to emulate, not so much. Too focus on their career and money most of the time... fa$t forward karma is all the rage for them. You have it all upside down bud, its those high life one dimensional people that have zero intention to change or help society and people, they don't see them. Lastly its not all true, Bill Gates and his wife are helping people now with their foundation because u know, now he can work for free on something.
Hmm. Low lifes with a hobby are able to change the World in Ways WE never imagined. Better than anything WE have Ever seen and He is just only getting started.
I think you are wrong. Open source is vastly superior to MS. As to compiled binaries, the best, like code, are the Ones that YOU WRITE! You Will C! or Maybe P(ython). C You soon @ powerbase@youtube.com.
+Usman Rafique I disagree. better is subjective to use. If Linux cant work on my hardware then its not better for me. Obviously not better for gammers and not better for all bussiness. Software that a company invested in that pays to keep their company running cannot be abondon for a phillosphy. In the real world of tech, a techonolgy ether gets the job done or its usless.
+Usman Rafique perhaps you should respect the hard work put into this project. Calling Linus a fsf supporter is like calling the sky green. Linux is a excellent server operating system because of its versatility and durability.
I sort of can feel how hard it was for Tovalds to explain his ideas while avoiding all technical jargons XD He just couldn't express himself fully coz the audience of TED talks need to be general.
+Janiel Martell I think he's a better public speaker than, let's say, Elon Musk. But both of those people are great nonetheless. I'd rather have them both to change every of our politician. They'll make much more useful difference in our world.
Janiel Martell What? Elon was born in South Africa and that country speak English FFS! Meanwhile this guy was born in Finland in which its language is NOT even close to any other Indo-European language.
For people who doesn't know anything about linux or coding: Linus gave birth a close-to-perfect seed that everyone around saw it capable of growing like a big tree. That's why Linus is so modest about, he knows Linux isn't what it is thanks only to him, but to lot of people who water that seed and gave it care, love, work, tears, and finally grew into a giant sequoia... out of metaphors: Linus wrote a Kernel to an operative system, and then people grew it up into Linux.
I recently got into Linux in my computer systems engineering program. Understanding what it finally is and hearing the developer himself talk about it is amazing.
A humble genius that does not strive for publicity! Thank you, Mr. Linus Torvalds, for propelling the technological evolution and brought us to another level with your brilliant work!
Real Legend in Software industry , I couldn't image the web without Linux running on the servers, and the most used piece of technology in Software engineering , i.e, Git also originally authorized by this man.
I switched from windows to linux 8 years ago... now I cannot work without linux. Desktop enviroments are fast and you learn so much more when you start using the terminal. Just started programming two years ago and git is crucial 😊
@@bitterlemonboy True, but he still does all the code review and merge on the main branch. Which in itself is pretty astonishing. The sheer scale of the work is hard to fathom, and he's been doing it for 30 years now, like a clock, without ever delivering a subpar or broken product. That again is extraordinary. 99% of people would have retired and moved on to another less demanding project 15 years ago. That's why I consider him the best living engineer bar none, and one of the best who has ever lived.
The point of that example wasn't the style but the use of an exception (the if statement). Torvalds thought it much more elegant to use an algorithm that doesn't needed an exception for certain cases but rather works generally.
"Good taste" in this way lies in the eye of the beholder, and that eye has been trained for different circumstances. In the kernel, performance is king, and avoiding a branch can save you precious nanoseconds. However, in your average software project, where coders come and go, maintaining a legible and easily understood codebase tends to trump minor performance gains. The comments help, of course, but the first example would be much easier to modify for someone new to the project or even the C language. Additionally, I'm a bit horrified at the lack of a halt condition if the list doesn't contain the element in question. Sure, if nobody ever misuses the function, that won't ever happen, and you shouldn't code for the lowest common denominator, but I much prefer belt and bracers. In this case, that might mean an additional branch PER ITERATION of the loop, which would be monstrous kernel-wise, but in most projects, easily catching that type of issue in the logs without too much debugging is really nice and cycles are cheap.
@@c99kfm Your reasoning to prefer the first code sample reminds my, why there is this "warning hot" label on my coffee. I my opinion the second code sample is more elegant because it does not disturb/break the flow. If you want to see code that's difficult to digest have a look at the doom code, or nearly every ASM code ;)
This man truly inspired millions of people in the world and changed the lives of billions. Im sure even after 10.000 years later, he will be remembered for what he did for the world.
This conversation has lighted my life so much, because everyone's telling you about the big genious that do all of this stuff, then this guy steps in and say he's not like that, I feel home and so good about myself. It's like we can be the way we are and change the world the way we are.
He wanted his own version of UNIX but it was closed-source so he decided to make a clone of UNIX. Almost 30 years later, this man's software essentially runs the modern world.
@@ilovepudding7873 Nah, take your time. You got years left on your life. Who's to say you have to invent a cure for cancer in your early 20's? It's taken hundreds of thousands of years to get where we are today. Your contribution could take a lifetime, and that's okay.
" I am not the guy who is looking at the sky and thinking about stars but I am guy who is looking down and trying to fix the pot hole so that I won't fall " -This man is a GENIUS 👏
The real Genius. And yes Linus you are a real good and great man for what you did and choose to give to the world for the benefit of all. Thank you for that.
No. He just copied an idea from Andrew Tanenbaum and implemented it. That is not brilliant, it is clever but far from being a genius. Bill Joy, to name one, can be considered brilliant in software. But you probably never heard of him. You do use his stuff, though, every day.
"I am not a visionary people. I do not have a five-year plan. I am an engineer. I am perfectly happy with all the people walking around, staring at the clouds, and looking at the stars, saying "I want to go there". But I am looking at the ground and I want to fix the pothole that's right in front of me before I fall in. This is the kind of person I am."
What a humble introspection from an exceptional human being. I hope there are more developers in the future who try to fix the problems they see around them from a young age.
Everyone praises Steve jobs but this man is a true legend.
The actual legend is Richard Stallman who is the true inventor of the operating system most people refer to as "Linux". This operating system is actually called GNU.
What Linus Torvalds created was a OS kernel, which is only one peace of the huge puzzle that an operating system is.
@@joshuatharakan3687 It's not the main part at all measured by amount of code.
Actually, there's no main part in an OS.
It's like saying that an engine is the main part of a car. There's no main part in a car because each part is completely useless without the rest of the car.
It's the same with an OS, there's no main part in an OS. If you remove one essential part, you don't have a functioning OS.
@@joshuatharakan3687 You lost yourself there. The transmision is what connects the engine to the wheels. Without the transmission or the axles or the wheels, you don't have a functioning car.
Without a heart you don't have a functioning body.
No essential component in a system is more important than another. Without an essential component, the system doesn't work, period.
Please stop arguing. Your vague concept of "most important part" is illusory. There's no such a thing.
@@joshuatharakan3687 You are not even trying to discuss the subject of this comment thread. You've lost yourself in trying to defend your idea of "most important part".
facts .
This guy made kernel at an age of 22
And here I am balancing switch between on and off.
Lol, when I was little I used to do that with the light switches, when I would balance it close enough it would fizzle, never did it around my parents because I thought I would get in trouble
@@Nick-lx4fo hahah
, 🤣😂😆
Hello world lol
@@Nick-lx4fo I got in trouble for this once, now I like electronics.
He is one of those people who has actually influenced every single persons lives without the majority knowing it.
who would have thought linus tovalds and genhis khan had so much in common
It's a bit like the seat belt and the polo vaccine.
@@informitas0117 i think we're toddlers who learned to pick our heads up, if you're in computer science you're in for a real career
Yeah, you know, like _RICHARD MATTHEW STALLMAN._
Yea,.. he inspired me , in 1993, thanks Linus for the fish. :)
He may not be a billionaire and famous like Musk,Bezos, Gates, Steve. But he is the most respected guy among techies. No money can buy that. We love you Linus ❤
Linus is very cool ❤
who are "we"? talk for your own self
@@M12Howitzerjust look the 👍
@@unixlonix wouldn't "I love you Linus" be more of a personal position? talking for others is a sign of a talker feeling him or herself weak is social regard ;-)
@@M12Howitzer-
He is as weak as you.
His use of "we" includes those who agree with him.
If you don't include yourself in this context, then responding in an offensive way makes you look weak.
From this point of view, it is nothing more than a response written to say
"I am separate, I am not one of you, I am different."
This ted talk was unlike any other
1. Not a man with vision
2. Not a man with big dreams
3. Not a man who is successful by selling products.
A true "Dark Knight"
I wanted to upvote this but it was exactly at 100 so nope not gonna disturb the harmony although 128 would probably be nicer or actually 127.
@@thirtycrows hahaha I like it. Thanks for the reply
Linus is being sarcastic. He has a different concept of those ofcourse.
also rough around the edges and disagrees with softness..... He's like the Batman of the tech world
And then there is RMS
This guy is a saint. He built the best kernel in the world and made it free
kernel*
and the git,so coool
os != kernel
Linus made the kernel, not an "OS". GNU existed before the Linux kernel. It was a project to create an "OS" that was based on free software (not as price but as usage). The project was missing a kernel, a centeral way to manage the hardware and software. (Would look up definition of a kernel for better understanding). As a bad metaphor, Linus created the drive chain for a car that was already mostly built.
He really did revolutionize the industry and made it possible for everyone to experience the life of an IT professional, it's really cool.
The host was trying to present him as a heroic figure, a dreamer with a vision because that’s more inspiring and perhaps more entertaining to the audience. But no, Linus has normal values just like the majority of us and he feels genuinely happy about it.
That's the hosts entire approach, to make you think exactly that. I'm actually very impressed. Some hosts genuinely try to describe people that way in order to present the guest in a 'heroic' light, this host wants you to think "huh, that host doesn't get how humble Linus is".
@@hexa3389 I hate all those chad soydevs stealing all the hot coder girls. jk man I just wanted to use the term hot soydevs
I think this host is fine. He wanted to present that way but course-corrected in the middle.
"normal values" for a Scandinavian LOL
I like what the host did there. He didn't ask stupid question and was respectful. Yet, his approach to ask questions from the other end of the "heroic spectrum" tickled Linus to position himself and give the audience a bigger insight on who he is and how he's ticking.
He is the reason why internet is so accessible and really affordable to everyone in the world.
No he isn't. Richard Stallman is.
@@drygordspellweaver8761 Their software completed each other, the Linux Kernel and GNU OS. Although I would credit Stallman for the philosophical movement in regards to free/ libre software.
@@drygordspellweaver8761 linux was what Richard stallman was waiting for and gnu was exactly what linux needed to have a head start
"So git is my second big project which is only created to maintain my first big project."
echo "This guy is truly an inspiration";
PUSH
echo ''I started using kali a week ago and i catched that ahahah''
This guy is truly an inspiration
Amazing
I think there are a lot of people, who thinks like him :
If I have a problem which a computer can solve, I tend to think: Maybe I should spend a few days to make this tool, which job I could do in a couple of minutes, and have to do it again and again an uncountable amount of times.
Windows / Apple have customers
Linux on other hand have fans.
You are a real hero for every tech person!
No im pretty sure they have very intense fans as well lmao
@@Shanboss277 they are called apple fanboys and windows fan boys.
Also Tux is here to stop your device heat up by working too hard to help cool the environment. While windows just straight up heat the house.
@@Shanboss277 looks like you dont wanna reply. But no prob with that
Apple IS Linux! They tossed their crappy OS years ago. All they do is slap an Apple GUI over it.
@@toriless it's not, Apple is a independent OS that borrows a lot from BSD, but it's not and never has been Linux based
"Linus Torvalds, thank you for the internet" is such an amazing compliment that went completely unnoticed 😄
yeah man the whole internet runs on linux!
No man few people like you and me noticed it even in loud applause 👏
@@rudeviper discrete math not all
Yup between Linus and Tim Berners Lee, they basically created the entire foundations for the internet as we know it today.
Windows IIS, running on hardly any machine, full of vulnerabilities and terribly slow: *bruh*
“Wow that’s so crazy that your software is in everything”
Linus: “I wanna hear my cat purr on my lap”
@@momchilandonov Do you use the internet? What OS do you think most servers run on?
@@momchilandonov Lol no it's not
@@waldolemmer how it's not. Java is used in more than 5.5 billion devices. Even the MP3 players in cars use it :).
@@momchilandonov What do you think your router runs? And on top of what OS do you think Java runs on most of these 5.5 billion devices? What do you think your smart TV runs as well (if you happen to have one)? You probably know the answer already.
@@artem.boldariev I am working in an ISP and worked with many cheap/expensive router vendors and generally they have their own OS. Sometimes some of the cheap ones are running on OS similar to Linux but not exactly Linux. Don't have a Smart TV :(. My point was that most computers are running on Windows as mostly Apple zombies buy Apple products. The smart people buy everything else - ASUS/HP/ACER etc. Apple is just mainstream in USA for some weird reason...
"I am not a visionary, i do not have a five year plan, i’m an engineer. I am perfectly fine with all the people who are walking around and just staring at the clouds and looking at the stars and say, i want to go there but i am looking at the ground and i want to fix the pot-hole that’s right in front of me before i fall in." -Linus Torvalds #LinusTorvalds #linux
This one is my favorite, too. 😆
csandreas1 One of my favorite. statements in the whole talk.
csandreas1 those looking at the stars were called “philosopher”.
@@ElaineShi-cn or elon musk
-MICHAEL SCOTT
He's like the Ghengis Khan of computers. A little bit of him in everyone's computer.
my god
LMAO
😂😂😂😂 * Blue screen error! *
he's literally fucked the whole information world, u mean?
Epic comment man!!
It really is insane how he created Git, the most used VCS system in the world used in every Silicon Valley tech company and wrote it HIMSELF... and made it free and open source.
In every company*
Especially because he had no other choice when it came to scaling. He dealt with merging code by EMAIL that is what impressed me. The guy creates stuff that is useful for him and gives it to other people if they need it too
and he did that just as an auxiliary project for easier management of the Linux kernel source code
The idea behind Git is not that hard. As I remember he made the first version after 3 days
Bro said ATM Machine
I am impressed by his level of self-awareness and self-acceptance, as well as his acknowledgement that all different kinds of people have value.
100% Agree; its OK not to be a people person; even not to like people. The bar can be set lower and still result in a pleasant world.
'First, do no harm!'
This guy is a legend.
He deserves Noble Prize
nobel prize for chemistry, becouse programming because programming is nothing else then combining some stuff together
nobel prize for health, becouse he cured cancer of dos/windows
nobel prize for physics, because linux is about breaking big chunks of code into small particles
nobel prize for literature, because code is some sort of literature
nobel prize for piece, because he solved Apple vs. Microsoft war
Nobel prize for economy for proving that free can be better than expansive
(it's not all accurate, it's just joke)
Yo he really does
He'd probably refuse it
@@adamrezabek9469 I felt it accurate.
@@adamrezabek9469 I think codes are more of an applied logistics than literature. 🤔
"Don't get me wrong, I'm actually not a people person"
We know, Linus. But we love you anyway
Yeah
FourthDerivative
How do I get into “Linux”, please? That’s why I’m watching this video. Refer a good book or video. I don’t even know to begin to get it. Do I have to purchase a computer with it or what? Please and thanks much.
@@TheAlchemistDavid nope, just install Ubuntu our Linux mint.
Yeah and see his attitude he doesn't have any he can just cause a stop the whole world if he just took linux down
@@0xreflex he cant take linux down lel
This man is so optimized... Doesn't move his jaw when he talk..
.
.
.
.
yeah, cz that's unnecessary loss of energy 😂
Vinay Tanwar 😂😂😂😂
He's a born ventriloquist.
Ugh who has a jaw anyway? bloat
@@sketchur lol legend
I am using Git, without having idea who this guy is. what a great surprise to meet this great man.
So u heard of Linux? But udk the founder lol wtf u live in a cave
@ 17:08 "I’m perfectly happy with all the people who are walking around and just staring at the clouds and looking at the stars and saying, “I want to go there,” but I’m looking at the ground and I want to fix the pothole that’s right in front of me before I fall in. This is the kind of person I am" Aristotle gives his thanks.
Word!!
love that
He hates giving talks but he's so good at it.
Agreed, many types the geeks are true antisocial inept personalities. But he's not at all. He's very knowledgeable in a lot of areas
He hates giving talks and that's why he's so good at it.
He hates practically everything.
what is funny that linus only wrote the core of linux
everything else as been written by the members of the opensource community.
That does makes linus a genious at all ... That does not prooves that linus have a programming talent ... That only prooves that he as been strategically and commercially present to aggretate the talent of guys in the opensource community who wrote the LINUX.
Linux is not the product of linux torvalds, linux is the product of somes genious in this opensource community !
So lets put some justice here !
I learned git a month ago and I love it. It’s incredibly robust and well designed.
If they ever do a movie on Linus Torvalds, Steve Carell is going to nail it.
OMFG MAN, GOLD COMMENT HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA
*spot on*
Oh yeah!
YES!
Ricky Gervais as the guy interviewing him here
Anyone notice the difference in his confidence? The moment we have code on the slides, he switches from going through an interviewer and directly address the audience. Wonderful!
He is doing work from home since the 90's
Way ahead of the current time 😂😂
😂😂
This guy has an exceptional integrity. An inspiration for those who are fed up with those arrogant, self-marketing, fake personality people.
Timestamps:
00:13 - on Linux world headquoters (about organisation of calm workspace)
02:15 - on open-source (getting reviews of your code; interacring with other people)
06:08 - how Linux became a huge project
07:12 - role of Linus in Git
09:09 - Linus' character
14:18 - good taste in coding (rewriting programs to remove special cases)
16:39 - "I am not visionary, I am an engineer"
17:25 - on Tesla vs Edisson
18:50 - on why Linus doesn't bother, about other companies making millions of dollars
19:30 - about if Open-source idea fully realised in the world
Thank you man, the developer is a fucking genius, but he can't express himself very fluently as the interviewer does. And since I'm not a native speaker this timelapse helps me to get the idea of the interview
Thanks!!!!!!
Thank you
Can I headquote you from my headquarters?
Is interacring what farmers do to their land?
thanks for this man!
He is the most humble person I've seen in years, such a simple personality full of passion and none of the greed, especially greed. I like how he says "I'm doing fine, and thats enough" when was asked about other people making worlds money with his contribution to technology. A man that cannot get corrupted by money is the thing people should get inspired by. I'd be honored to share a couple teas with him.
I keep seeing people say he is famously unhumble but I can’t really see any of that
This guy was so pissed off by Microsoft and Apple, he made his own operating system.
Madlad level 100.
Linux is not an operating system
@@goochcatcher please elaborate.
@@Tornn222 Linux is a kernel
No, he made Linux because MInix wasn't free.
@@OlaFosheimGrstad He made it because he didn't believe in few companies controlling everything!
He looks so uncomfortable out in public, yet sticks it out make a great and inspiring talk. And you could tell he'd rather be anywhere than talking in public right now. I recall that feeling. Still a legend
Notice how he just walks away in the end when the crowd give him a standing ovation, shows how much he's not interested in glory
He was probable thinking: "Glad that is over"
@@hds66nl29 lol
literally every non-people person
His kernel that he write at age 22 powered my phones, my travels laptop and many others
absolutely amazing, thank you Linus Torvalds
Linux is great, Git is fantastic, Linus is the man.
"If I was stranded on an island and the only way to get out is making a pretty UI. I would die there", Same and True.
Lol yes
Not a coder- barely have handle on HTML, XML and CSS- nearly fell out of my desk chair laughing.
Nuno Pinheiro would get out instantly
Linus brings up a point that I wish more people trying to get into programming miss, which is that the best way to make something great is to make something that is useful to you, that you need, if there is something you wish your computer could do then make that.
+Ace shinigami This is true to pretty much any breakthrough business.
I wish my computer could fly to Mars and teleport me there ;-) What programming languages should i start learning to make that?
Python and learn math. We need applied math to do what you said. There is also Kip Thorne's method, but that's expensive.
@@mortenrobinson Yeah you can, Maybe if you learn a lot and waste millions making that, you will can make that
As Anne Lamott said, "write the book you need to read."
“I’m perfectly happy with people looking at the stars and saying ‘I want to go there’ but I’m an engineer. I’m looking at the ground and I want to fix the potholes right in front of me before I fall in” - Linus Torvaldes
Although he said he’s not a people person like a zillion times, I feel I can listen to this genius all day
The man who hates other people brought people closer together, just think about that.
but his intention was not that... and even he did not want that as well... it happened somehow!! due to some "commercial people"
Well, you can say it was a bug then became main feature
@@tmcode2010 lmao
@@tmcode2010 Nailed it!
To me, I remember him saying: "I don't really like other people" which has a different meaning than what you wrote. And I believe his real words make your statement more powerful.
I realized about halfway through the necessity of this being an interview as opposed to a talk. I'm really impressed by this guys mind.
***** Well get over yourself. Did you come here to hear Linus, or troll for comments?
its Linus...he hates media and exposure...if he wasn't asked questions he will not even talk hhh... not a people person as he kept sayin
I think Linus does public speaking well on interviews rather than talks. Now that I think about it, I haven't watched a video of him giving a talk yet.
Either way, hearing Linus' opinions is valuable in itself.
What mind? He Just Wrote it Out of the Language! Making CODE Profanity!
It's kinda amazing that "not a people person" made an OS for the people, not for profit.
I want this man live 1000 years, the world needs him.
Servers* need him. Normal people like other things, like "UI" and "things working out of the box"...the little luxuries :)
@@TheUltimateBlooper ahahhaahah
@@TheUltimateBlooper and normal people use what to connect between them?
I've watched a few videos with Linus. What I appreciate, is he doesn't mince words, he says what's on his mind, and calls it as he sees it. He doesn't have to be "nice".
That just politely saying he is quite a nasty guy to work with. and that he is.
He doesn't need to be nice and, apparently, neither the OSes derived from his work... Explains the fucking mess of linux.
@@TheEddie581Ah yes, the usual hate speech based on nothing and that tries to put words in other’s mouths
While we harp about Steve Job and Elon Musk, its people like Linus Trovald whose work will really impact the world in the long run....
Uhh how?
No steve means no popularization of GUI. No PC domination.
@@fmartin59 Wrong. Steve jobs did no coding. Steve wozniak is the engineer behind apple.
Just like Linus implied, different types of people are necessary. Both Wozniak and Jobs were necessary to make Apple a success because they both had skills that helped the company grow. We should not put people below other people just because we value their work less
Dragonvarine
Did you ever read the book?
Jobs was pretty important for the first GUI iteration. He may not have done coding work on it at that time, but why is that relev?
Amen
The real boss.linus should be given Nobel prize..for his contribution
no really just no...
Yes I agree that Linus should get a Nobel prize. He is headstrong, yet selfless! He designs much better software than I thought! The example in this TED talk of bad code vs good code, totally makes sense. The if statement just makes the code more complex with extra processing and not enough documentation! The good code, the one he said had good taste, was much harder to envision but much more elegant and simplified which would reduce the processing, of the CPU, maybe to 50% to 75% of the processing time. And it had much better documentation!
Linus's interview on TED talks, this video, makes me very much want to use Linux as my primary software! I want to know which Linux Distro he uses, and which one he recommends! I've used Linux before, from 2008 to 2012. Ubuntu. But when Debian incorporated FreeBSD Software I did not want to be with Debian based Distros anymore. I still don't want to be with FreeBSD Related software because it has a Demon as it's mascot, and that Daemon looks like a young devil. Which I totally do not like at all. I want to be with Heaven On Earth, and God, and Jesus, and Angels, not the devil.
Which makes me wonder why there are Daemons in the Linux Distros. Could Linus and a dedicated group engineer those Demons into Angels instead, if they are good demons?
Please let me know? And hopefully Linus will read this comment someday! He is a great man who gave away his possible copyright to allow for Free and Open Source software! Thank-you very much Linus!
Christ Chalmers
2019 April 4 Thursday 6:14pm.
Damn right
@@christchalmers2919 Damn! The way you connected that is beautiful! More power to Angels xD
Nobel prize, really? There is no a Nobel prize to something like technology or programming. What he should be given, probably, is the Turing Prize.
"I don't really like other people." - This is the most finnish thing he could have said :D plus he works in IT ^^
If you work in IT support you rapidly come to hate both computers and people.
bdf2718 Yes, I can agree!
The most common computer problem is between the monitor and the chair...
Jonathan De Jesus do you mean the desk?
The user...
Interviewer killed it too, this guy rules
He's the founder of Ted!
Every single question is on point and I can see Linus Torvalds pretty much excited to answer every one of them. It's a great interview.
What a brilliant idea to have a really smart interviewer to prompt and moderate the usually reticent Linus Torvald. It brought out some different aspects of his personality, and where he's coming from, and made it quite enjoyable to listen to him without his ego getting so much in the way. I came away from this TED Talk appreciating much more Torvalds contributions to the world as it is today.
He is the hero of our time !
Many IT fathers name their kids after him.
What? I'm going to name my kid Intel or Nvidia
Joao Rocha - If i were your neighbor i'd call my kid AMD just to see how that relationship turns out.
Just don't name him/her Vista
you should name your kid with Newell or Valve?
.
.
.
.
.
for get UNLIMITED FREE STEAM WALLET XD
Which name do they name the children most, Linus or Torvalds?
My 7+ year old laptop still works in a descent manner just because of Linux OS. Thank you so much for developing something that helps many. Especially for those who can't afford super computing specs.
My desktop is from 2007, so 16 years old. And still runs fully updated Gentoo
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called Linux, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.
There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called Linux distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux!
What is amazing is my dad has worked with Linus Torvalds on a lot of the Linux and Git Projects. I mean half of the Suse Code is by my dad as he worked with the group on the original ideas.
How would your dad describe him? Is he the humblest guy i think or is it true that when Linus says "sometimes I'm not a nice person" ? Is he any frustrating to talk or work with?
thank your dad for helping provide to such a amazing project !
damn you have Linux in your blood...
big thank you to your dad.
Who is your dad? (just out of curiosity)
“I’m perfectly happy with the people that walk around and look at clouds and the stars and say “I want to be there”, but I’m the one that’s looking at the ground and thinking “I’m going to fix that pot hole”
So much to be learned from Linus, amazing.
his work is oxygen to lots of IT professional, Governments, and Companies
@@Facebook-StevenSchmidlap actually carbon dioxide is not poisonous. Carbon monoxide is. Carbon dioxide just acts as a greenhouse gas causing global warming.
That guy is absolutely awesome! So great that you do not just show off the flashy extroverts with fancy presentations, but also have a man that makes calling yourself a nerd a badge of honour. And just how he uses an example of actually code (makes no sense to me), instead of only making sure that everyone in the word can understand it, makes me even more want to learn to code (when I have the time...).
Thank you.
The second linked list remove() implementation can be understood with a good grasp of pointers and referencing and dereferencing operators. & is the reference operator and gives you the address (pointer) to a variable in RAM, * is the dereference operator which reverses the process and accesses the data in a pointer. The beauty of the 2nd implementation is that it recognizes that the pointer to the head and the variable holding that pointer are one in the same and a change in data in one will change the data in the other, and thus there is no need to check if it's the head.
There is no way to hate Linus even though he has yelled at us so many times in forums because que asked something silly. This guy is a living fucking legend and should get much more attention for everything his work has allowed us to achieve.
I would feel honored to be yelled at by Linus. 😁
The fact that he's in the forums at all screaming at people is already lovely. He could have retired, gone filthy rich etc.
@@dacueba-games He could easily just create his own optimized distro charge a sub for it and make a fortune. He wouldn't even have to charge much.
"Don´t get me wrong, I actually do not like people"
🤣🤣🤣
He words come difficult to autistic person - maybe he means I am uncomfortable with people - don't want them near me
Introvert
Mvuselelo Makhathini or maybe English is his third language. He’s translating to English with nuances ingrained in other languages and culture. One good example is translating any proverbs to other languages, there’s the cultural background to translate too, it might not possible be as a word by word translation to relay the whole context and meaning.
@@nadrile Pretty sure he just meant that he doesn't like people, perfectly understandable if you ask me. Also, he's Finnish, I'm Norwegian, in Scandinavian countries it's common to just say what you mean without all the courtesy phrasing some English speaking countries use. If we say "I don't like people" that means we don't like people and are not looking to change our minds about it, very straight forward and uncomplicated. Linus has no problem with the language barrier as he's very used to communicating in English. So I think you guys are just picking up on the cultural difference that we tend to think courtesy phrasing and polite small talk is dishonest and therefore the opposite of courteous, if you don't like us and don't want to talk to us we want you to tell us and not pretend like you do and waste our time.
Can I just say that git is one of the best, most ingenious pieces of software ever written.
Ya but working with it is like smashing your nuts with a hammer and then jumping up and down on them
Only sometimes........
@@aegisgfx nope. Git is fine. Much better than the alternatives. This is the only reason why it is widely adopted....
Yes sir, you totally can.
@@aegisgfx, for the end user it's not nearly as bad as WinDO$.
How refreshing to hear someone speak with honesty. Just imagine certain other well-known people doing that? Great talk...
Interviewer shouldn't really say he's stubborn. He has perseverance, grit and and unmatched passion for his work.
"There are even people who name their companies after him"
Killed me 😂😂
Yes, Mr batteries.
Micro and soft mr bill gates p*n*s 😂
Webservers, supercomputers, industrial robotics, driverless cars, smartphones, stock exchanges (NASDAQ/NYSE/CMX/DBG), the international space station, etc. are all running some form of the Linux kernel.
A Finnish nerd has taken over the world.
ⵔⵓⴽⴰⵜⴽⴰⵜ
That is the strangest sentence I've read in my life
Unix kernel.
You're absolutely right. If the companies would only go for the most advanced and technical superior product, the chances are high that most of them would be made proprietary. But they don't, the care about the software being free, alowing them to openly coloborate, adjust things as they need it and share their achievements with others. Being Free is the most important attribute in nowaday's UNIX world. Richard Stallman did important work for the community to realize that.
And trump want to send back all international people back to their homes. hmm, let me think.
Wow
Not many people within the world of technology nowadays who act as utterly selfless as Linus, huge credit to the guy. If everybody could work like this we'd be superhumans in no time.
The people we hear about are rarely true tech people themselves. Musk, Gates, Jobs, ... They are all businessmen! Maybe businessmen with some education and experience in a tech related field, but not one of them got rich because he did significant work at the technical level himself
It's really interesting how Linus realized that, even being a strongly self-centered introvert, his projects could only grow up if he let other people join in.
No matter how good you are at something, even if you're a genius: you'll need a lot of other people to make things work.
I've seen this myself throughout life. Many of friends are brilliant in what they do, but not exceptionally recognized for that, professionally and financially speaking. On the other hand, the most successeful people are usually the ones who know how to deal with others and make them work together.
Nowadays we're taught to work hard on ourselves, study overnight, acquire knowledge, learn loads of stuff, practice everyday and be as individually productive as humanly possible. But I hardly see anybody talking about how important it is to build relationships, be in touch with your team, find ways to cooperate and help each other. And Linus's example here is that it doesn't even mean you have to be an outgoing person or even be friends with anybody: you can find your own way to deal with that.
Amazing interview!
lol come on man! you can't change a true introvert into a social butterfly. They will only put up with others for so long until they will get exhausted.
@@caleb7799 But good ones can delegate tasks they are not interested in
People are Annoy
U trust everyone? Dude, get out of here
And yet most companies now think software engineers should work in an open collaborative environment surrounded by noise and distractions.
Ryan Bray Yes - this too is a myopia, but of the mind; assuming that others do or should think the same way you do, and to do otherwise is a problem or even a disease/malfunction.
+Ryan Bray - This really id the dumbest paradigm shift given that programming is dominated by introverts (and for good reason).
wartime
All developers are different. You might prefer to work alone in a quiet environment while some other developers would prefer working in a crowded environment full of innovation and ideas.
Ryan Bray humans are social animals, most humans work better with others, Linus, you, me, and many others might not work well with others, but most people do!
The first guy to not hold an imaginary box on TED
I think that he was referring about the ideas behind the people who went in Ted. Most of them are utopias.
could mean multiple tings. I'm guessing the "anti-visionary" perspective. However, you could also be talking about not giving speeches with their hands... hahahaha.
You mean jam jar?
Inname Of no, he's referring to the mannerisms many public speakers do. namely throw forth both their hands as if they are holding a box
Cannot unsee! Thank you.
This man is real, he is sincere, when some big tech CEO speaks he just spouts marketing bs "we aim to bring people together", "we care", etc. Linus on the other hand is a real human without hidden agendas to grab more money for himself, he just goes "well I love people, but not in that way...I mean I'm not a people person...I like to program in in my bathrobe..." etc. he is just speaking his heart, saying what he loves to do, what he is and what he is not. He is not constantly scheming on how to have more money or be more powerful etc.
He is a pure programmer. He is not a marketer like Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg or Bill Gates. Never forget that marketers are not the ones who change the world in a positive way. Thank you so much for the wonderful legacy you left to the world.
Its clear that he is anxious about being on stage, but is also enjoying sharing his story. Wholesome!
This man is the kind of person who would serve in any context of public society (administrative, judicial, political ...)
-Good
-Fair
-Unselfish
-Serene
-Ambitious for himself and for the place where he lives ...
damn, it would take more men like Linus Torvalds.
He is hardly serene at all times (he is not a people person)
I'm a Linux user but in my opinion his greatest work was git
The next day if I can't use linux, I'd be fine. Upset, but fine. I'd switch to another os.
But I can't imagine living without git.
It has changed the way I write code essentially forever
Exactly!
But it's not just Linux, it's Linux kernel...more than half the stuff you are writing code for will be obsolete without Linux
@@sudiptadey707 the linux kernel is just a part of linux, also, there are POSIX standards which mean its much easier to switch between Unixlike OSes
Github has an impact beyond Linux, or Android into all kind of coding projects and application types. You may never have even touched a Linux machine but use it. Heck, I have even used to program my hub for my house and my wife has used if for scientific applications.
Yes agreed
plz suggest me any basic linux cli source.
thanks
literally where would we be without this guy? i couldn't even imagine how massively different things would be.
He's an example of person who really found his passion and dived into it so deeply.
This man is one of my personal heroes.
+Nevin Zavell Along with Linus Torvalds, also from Finland is Jarkko Oikarinen; the creator of IRC.
Nevin Zavell There's also an 85% chance he hates your code
Hans S More then 85% mate.
Me too
I don't care how much of people person he is, I'd still give him a hug if I saw home in person.
"code either works or it doesn't".
-- Someone who never did CSS before
xD
it doesn't work UNTIL you work at it enough to get it to work; by then you will have your much deserved smirk!
That was a beautiful poem... :')
Herco - Enduro haha thanks
That's because CSS is not code!
"Not all heroes wear capes", this guy is a superhero in the software world
He wears a bathrobe
I did a workshop in computer network and was amazed to find that most of the internet (+80% sites and servers) use Linux... And it is mindblowing simple and works beautifully well. Better than Microsoft or Apple.
@Usman Rafique That bunch that your calling «low life» did and do very good work btw, in fact better work most of the time then the so-called pros. And they do other things you know, the kind that makes you think, take your time, use your brain. The suits that you seems to want to emulate, not so much. Too focus on their career and money most of the time... fa$t forward karma is all the rage for them. You have it all upside down bud, its those high life one dimensional people that have zero intention to change or help society and people, they don't see them. Lastly its not all true, Bill Gates and his wife are helping people now with their foundation because u know, now he can work for free on something.
Hmm. Low lifes with a hobby are able to change the World in Ways WE never imagined. Better than anything WE have Ever seen and He is just only getting started.
I think you are wrong. Open source is vastly superior to MS. As to compiled binaries, the best, like code, are the Ones that YOU WRITE! You Will C! or Maybe P(ython). C You soon @ powerbase@youtube.com.
+Usman Rafique I disagree. better is subjective to use. If Linux cant work on my hardware then its not better for me. Obviously not better for gammers and not better for all bussiness. Software that a company invested in that pays to keep their company running cannot be abondon for a phillosphy. In the real world of tech, a techonolgy ether gets the job done or its usless.
+Usman Rafique perhaps you should respect the hard work put into this project. Calling Linus a fsf supporter is like calling the sky green. Linux is a excellent server operating system because of its versatility and durability.
honesty, humility and integrity..
Logical Phallusy, nobody stole anything from the GNU project, and certainly not from their HURD codebase.
"every single project I've ever coded has been something I needed"
Man...that was brutal!
especially at the end where’s he’s like, “well you’re not a visionary so you can’t decide”
Love his story, and glad that even though he's an introvert he still shared it with the world
I sort of can feel how hard it was for Tovalds to explain his ideas while avoiding all technical jargons XD He just couldn't express himself fully coz the audience of TED talks need to be general.
it's not so much about the audience and more about Linus not liking people so he doesn't interact/express his ideas well with people
+Janiel Martell I think he's a better public speaker than, let's say, Elon Musk. But both of those people are great nonetheless. I'd rather have them both to change every of our politician. They'll make much more useful difference in our world.
+011azr But with Elon Musk there's a language barrier.
Janiel Martell What? Elon was born in South Africa and that country speak English FFS! Meanwhile this guy was born in Finland in which its language is NOT even close to any other Indo-European language.
+011azr Yeah but his english isn't as good (that's what I meant)
For people who doesn't know anything about linux or coding: Linus gave birth a close-to-perfect seed that everyone around saw it capable of growing like a big tree. That's why Linus is so modest about, he knows Linux isn't what it is thanks only to him, but to lot of people who water that seed and gave it care, love, work, tears, and finally grew into a giant sequoia... out of metaphors: Linus wrote a Kernel to an operative system, and then people grew it up into Linux.
I recently got into Linux in my computer systems engineering program. Understanding what it finally is and hearing the developer himself talk about it is amazing.
A humble genius that does not strive for publicity! Thank you, Mr. Linus Torvalds, for propelling the technological evolution and brought us to another level with your brilliant work!
I lived in Linus Torvalds time. Thanks for that
Bro who is this man
@@terabaap3437 he created linux?
Is there any word greater then Legend so i can define this man
"Genius is keep doing it untill it is right", another genius said that. Rest of us give up and shift our focus.
", another genius said that. Rest of us give up and shift our focus." It appears that your sentence needs an update, do you want me to debug it?
Real Legend in Software industry , I couldn't image the web without Linux running on the servers, and the most used piece of technology in Software engineering , i.e, Git also originally authorized by this man.
I switched from windows to linux 8 years ago... now I cannot work without linux. Desktop enviroments are fast and you learn so much more when you start using the terminal.
Just started programming two years ago and git is crucial 😊
But is your username Sexual Chocolate?
If you just started programming 2 yeara ago what were you doing for 6 years on linux?
@@beatbeast747 youtub-ing
@@beatbeast747 Having fun without worrying about learn how to code
Probably just using it @@beatbeast747 . It is possible that a lot of us just use machines. Like driving a car without tweaking it for performance.
Linux Kernel and Git by ONE GENIUS.
No, by thousands of geniuses around the world..
@@bitterlemonboy Oh yes. But I am sure you know what I mean(t).
@@bitterlemonboy True, but he still does all the code review and merge on the main branch. Which in itself is pretty astonishing. The sheer scale of the work is hard to fathom, and he's been doing it for 30 years now, like a clock, without ever delivering a subpar or broken product. That again is extraordinary. 99% of people would have retired and moved on to another less demanding project 15 years ago.
That's why I consider him the best living engineer bar none, and one of the best who has ever lived.
Its great to hear that he is terrible at UI also :) But the sad thing is my code looks exactly like the bad example they show :(
The point of that example wasn't the style but the use of an exception (the if statement). Torvalds thought it much more elegant to use an algorithm that doesn't needed an exception for certain cases but rather works generally.
Linux is a kernel, not OS.
"Good taste" in this way lies in the eye of the beholder, and that eye has been trained for different circumstances.
In the kernel, performance is king, and avoiding a branch can save you precious nanoseconds. However, in your average software project, where coders come and go, maintaining a legible and easily understood codebase tends to trump minor performance gains. The comments help, of course, but the first example would be much easier to modify for someone new to the project or even the C language.
Additionally, I'm a bit horrified at the lack of a halt condition if the list doesn't contain the element in question. Sure, if nobody ever misuses the function, that won't ever happen, and you shouldn't code for the lowest common denominator, but I much prefer belt and bracers. In this case, that might mean an additional branch PER ITERATION of the loop, which would be monstrous kernel-wise, but in most projects, easily catching that type of issue in the logs without too much debugging is really nice and cycles are cheap.
@@c99kfm Your reasoning to prefer the first code sample reminds my, why there is this "warning hot" label on my coffee. I my opinion the second code sample is more elegant because it does not disturb/break the flow. If you want to see code that's difficult to digest have a look at the doom code, or nearly every ASM code ;)
@@sweetberries4611 Whats the difference can you please explain? Thank you.
This man truly inspired millions of people in the world and changed the lives of billions. Im sure even after 10.000 years later, he will be remembered for what he did for the world.
Rumor has it that Bill Gates has nightmares with Linus and an army of penguins.
and those penguins capture him, gave him an apple to eat, leaving him stranded in a, wait for it, a windowless room..
@@shamikpal4449 take my like
r/angryupvote
"So git is my second big project which is only created to maintain my first big project."
echo "This guy is truly an inspiration";
And Putin as well
That’s literally my wallpaper. Linux is just so amazing and fun for some reason
This conversation has lighted my life so much, because everyone's telling you about the big genious that do all of this stuff, then this guy steps in and say he's not like that, I feel home and so good about myself. It's like we can be the way we are and change the world the way we are.
He was 22 years old when he release the first version of Linux... Dafaq 🤯
He wanted his own version of UNIX but it was closed-source so he decided to make a clone of UNIX. Almost 30 years later, this man's software essentially runs the modern world.
Im 22 with no goal in life and this guy made linux. I really need to step my game up
@@ilovepudding7873 Nah, take your time. You got years left on your life. Who's to say you have to invent a cure for cancer in your early 20's? It's taken hundreds of thousands of years to get where we are today. Your contribution could take a lifetime, and that's okay.
21 here and I can't make a decent software
Calm down guys, like he said he had been coding for 11 years.
" I am not the guy who is looking at the sky and thinking about stars but I am guy who is looking down and trying to fix the pot hole so that I won't fall " -This man is a GENIUS 👏
The real Genius. And yes Linus you are a real good and great man for what you did and choose to give to the world for the benefit of all. Thank you for that.
No. He just copied an idea from Andrew Tanenbaum and implemented it. That is not brilliant, it is clever but far from being a genius. Bill Joy, to name one, can be considered brilliant in software. But you probably never heard of him. You do use his stuff, though, every day.
Linus Torvalds, Thank you for Linux
And Git.
SVN is so bad. Git is so much more flexible and just works!
You're welcome
-Sir Torvalds
Linus, thank you for Linux
Rich, thank you for GNU
🥰🥰🥰🥰
we need a documentary about his life ! i'd pay for that
for people who read:
Just for Fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary
@X bit are you his wife? ;)
@X bit your logic is interesting too. You come out of nowhere talking about children and heroes. I did not talk about that before.
Nah, it'd be open source lol.
"I am not a visionary people. I do not have a five-year plan. I am an engineer. I am perfectly happy with all the people walking around, staring at the clouds, and looking at the stars, saying "I want to go there". But I am looking at the ground and I want to fix the pothole that's right in front of me before I fall in. This is the kind of person I am."
What a humble introspection from an exceptional human being. I hope there are more developers in the future who try to fix the problems they see around them from a young age.
"I can't do UI to save my life"
.
.
.
It all makes sense
What is ui?
Now we know
@@burakayan3360 user interface
😂
this is so funny
I was so glad to see this interview of Linus Torvalds. He is a hero. (at least to me), and I think to many, especially those who use Linux.
Worked with the Linux development programme for 16 yrs I'm happy where linux is today. This guy will be always inspiration for open source community.