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Tom's Hardware on MSNLinus Torvalds still uses an AMD RX 580 from 2017 — also ditches Apple Silicon for an Intel laptopLinux creator Linus Torvalds still uses an AMD RX 580 and an Intel laptop for kernel development, as revealed through a bug ...
The Register on MSN10h
Gadget geeks aghast at guru's geriatric GPUParamount Penguin Linus Torvalds still uses a 2017 graphics card As work picks up on the forthcoming Linux 6.17, many ...
"I would obviously love for Linux to take over that world too," said Torvalds during the keynote that was reported by CIO, "but it turns out it's a really hard area to enter. I'm still working on it.
After 30 years of working on Linux, Linus Torvalds is still enthusiastic about the open-source operating system he created and its future prospects for innovation. Today, the Linux operating ...
Torvalds accidentally scheduled his family vacation over the dates as the Linux Maintainer Summit, a meeting of the top Linux developers. When asked, Linus suggested that the developers instead ...
Today, Torvalds continued, "Many changes have been invisible. Even I don't see all the uses of Linux." Of course, Linux isn't the right operating system for all embedded devices.
Torvalds replied that “it didn’t happen overnight. There’s no single point where I was surprised, really. The surprising hardware is from 15 years ago when people started using Linux.” ...
Torvalds said he has no idea where Linux will end up in five years. “I never had a plan. I still don’t have a plan. It is kind of evolution in biology: there is no end plan.
Torvalds said earlier in the 44-minute talk (shown below) that the Linux desktop was a “morass of infighting.” (The Steam talk starts around 29:50 minutes for those who want to fast foward.) ...
The last time I had the occasion to interview Linus Torvalds, it was 2004, and version 2.6 of the Linux kernel had been recently released.
Oregon Tech Linux creator Linus Torvalds 'truly sorry' for online behavior, plans to take time off Published: Sep. 17, 2018, 3:45 p.m.
Back in 2011, with the release of Linux 3.0, Torvalds said those "2.6.<bignum>" days were over—and now here we are, a few weeks away from the release of Linux 3.20, and it seems we're on the ...
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