Comments on: Torvalds switches to Apple
Linux figure says his main desktop is no longer an x86 machine. He wanted to "check out the other side."
Linux figure says his main desktop is no longer an x86 machine. He wanted to "check out the other side."
December 8, 2009 12:01 AM PST
December 8, 2009 12:01 AM PST
December 7, 2009 10:50 PM PST
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but i'll tell you what: i wouldn't mind a free a computer, but i'd settle for buy one, get one free day at in-n-out. hell yeah!
but i'll tell you what: i wouldn't mind a free a computer, but i'd settle for buy one, get one free day at in-n-out. hell yeah!
This belongs in the gossip column.
This belongs in the gossip column.
"Oh, and part of it is that I got the machine for free,' said Torvalds. 'I'm really a technology *****."
"Oh, and part of it is that I got the machine for free,' said Torvalds. 'I'm really a technology *****."
Linus spent some quality time with OSX. Linux on the desktop is
still a huge pain. Ease of install, use, configurability etc. of all
distros are still way behind OSX. Behind XP even. I've tried most
distros on both i386 and PPC and they are just not worth the
hassle, especially if you've got a nice PowerMac sitting on your
desk.
All the conveniences of Mac OS X -- the user interface, hardware configuration -- those are all built *on top* of the kernel. The people that need to study Mac OS are the ones who build the desktops, the installers, the configuration tools. That means the Gnome and KDE projects, distributions like Red Hat or SuSE, etc.
Linus spent some quality time with OSX. Linux on the desktop is
still a huge pain. Ease of install, use, configurability etc. of all
distros are still way behind OSX. Behind XP even. I've tried most
distros on both i386 and PPC and they are just not worth the
hassle, especially if you've got a nice PowerMac sitting on your
desk.
All the conveniences of Mac OS X -- the user interface, hardware configuration -- those are all built *on top* of the kernel. The people that need to study Mac OS are the ones who build the desktops, the installers, the configuration tools. That means the Gnome and KDE projects, distributions like Red Hat or SuSE, etc.
- Torvalds switches to Apple
- by March 11, 2005 9:06 AM PST
- Well, ya gotta hand it to the guy... he's blatantly honest (re: "Oh, and part of it is that I got the machine for free," said Torvalds. "I'm really a technology *****.").
- Like this Reply to this comment
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