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Linus Torvalds' Benevolent Dictatorship (Business Week)

Business Week interviews Linus Torvalds. "I am a dictator, but it's the right kind of dictatorship. I can't really do anything that screws people over. The benevolence is built in. I can't be nasty. If my baser instincts took hold, they wouldn't trust me, and they wouldn't work with me anymore. I'm not so much a leader, I'm more of a shepherd."
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Excellent interview

Posted Aug 18, 2004 15:57 UTC (Wed) by rjamestaylor (guest, #339) [Link]

I am always amazed, pleasantly, at Linus' responses to loaded questions and especially his penchant for stiff-arming the "opposition" with a turn of phrase. Examples in this article:
  • Turning the looming threat over MSFT patent attacks against Linux into a matter of Bill's and Steve's personal pride over winning via innovation versus litigation
  • Besting the "Cathederal and Baazar" analogy to a simpler and more loaded analogy between the scientific method and witchcraft.
  • Exposing the marketing circus behind so-called "innovation" versus publicly exposed hardwork
  • Putting the lie to FUD about re-using good ideas with a simple Eistein analogy
  • Explaining his key role while diminishing his theoretical importance
  • Deflating the potential controversy over the more-of-the-same contribution sign-off procedures
  • Diminishing the importance of proprietary OS and other software infrastucture as products in themselves
  • Re-phrasing Open Source vs Closed Source in terms of the Scientific Method versus methods long ago abandoned in favor of the former.
  • Flipping the FUD of anti-Americanism (i.e., it's an anti-American thing to hurt the US dominance in software development) into a matter of American pride (i.e., the US needs to adopt the best tools and methods to continue to innovate).
His deftness in the media is a real asset to the whole community.

Excellent interview

Posted Aug 18, 2004 16:30 UTC (Wed) by purslow (guest, #8716) [Link]

Agreed, but it's not a surprise: he grew up in Europe.

Europe

Posted Aug 18, 2004 18:51 UTC (Wed) by andrel (subscriber, #5166) [Link]

Plenty of Europeans are inarticulate. More relevant: Linus's parents are journalists and his father is a politician.

Finland

Posted Aug 19, 2004 8:41 UTC (Thu) by chepelov (guest, #23542) [Link]

Is his father still active in politics? IIRC, Linus stated he will not settle back to Finland (too cold or not enough sunlight, or something to that effect). Wouldn't that hurt his father's career?

Anyway, parent is right: growing up in a highly media-aware environment certainly helps more with being articulate and a good handler of journalists than growing up in one or another $LOCALE.

Finland

Posted Aug 19, 2004 13:38 UTC (Thu) by eru (subscriber, #2753) [Link]

Is his father still active in politics?

Nils Torvalds never was a visible figure in Finnish politics. I only remember hearing about him as the father of Linus. If Wikipedia is to be believed, he is more a journalist.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Torvalds

Excellent interview

Posted Aug 18, 2004 22:46 UTC (Wed) by JoeBuck (subscriber, #2330) [Link]

It might have been clearer if he had said "alchemy" rather than "witchcraft", since this is really what he was describing (the alchemists made many important discoveries, but as they didn't share them, progress was extremely slow).

He did not say in this article what he has said elsewhere, that most of the interesting work these days is not done in the kernel and thus he has nothing to do with it (even from a management standpoint). The trade press is not clear on this.

"Brutus is an honorable man"

Posted Aug 18, 2004 16:06 UTC (Wed) by justme (guest, #19967) [Link]

I like the comment where Linus says MS would be "ashamed" to use legal tactics against competition. Since I have a hard time believing he doesn't know of MS' unclean hands in the SCO suits (he mentions Groklaw later in the interview), this comment smacks of Linus either pre-emptively shaming MS, or simply mocking them.

Not that Linus would ever deliver sarcasm with a straight face. That would never happen.

Linus Torvalds' Benevolent Dictatorship (Business Week)

Posted Aug 22, 2004 2:33 UTC (Sun) by csawtell (subscriber, #986) [Link]

"I am a dictator, but it's the right kind of dictatorship. I can't really
do anything that screws people over. The benevolence is built in. I can't
be nasty. If my baser instincts took hold, they wouldn't trust me, and
they wouldn't work with me anymore. I'm not so much a leader, I'm more of
a shepherd."

What Linus is reported as saying sounds to me like a very good definition
of the functions of a constitutional monarchy.

God save the King.

Linus Torvalds' Benevolent Dictatorship (Business Week)

Posted Sep 1, 2004 4:49 UTC (Wed) by xoddam (subscriber, #2322) [Link]

Actually it's the complete opposite of a constitutional monarchy.

A constitutional monarch holds all authority but no power, as power
is vested in politicians who are responsible to the monarch and the
people for their errors.

On paper, Torvalds holds almost no authority at all, but in practical
terms he wields a lot of power -- as long as he uses it *responsibly*.
One slip and he'll lose his leadership role altogether.

Linus is the Prime Minister, not the King.

Of course, I can think of at least two prominent Prime Ministers of
the early 21st century who have thrown constitutional convention to
the winds and care not a whit about being responsible to the public.
Linus' responsibility is better enforced :-)

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