A few months ago, we looked at Linus Torvalds in his own words, which was surprisingly popular (for a filler
. So following the same approach (i.e. too busy to write something original today
, what are the top-ten best mailing list posts in the history of free/open source software?
This is pretty difficult to say of course, so here are ten coolest posts that spring to mind. If you can think of a better one, please do paste a link in the comments.
- Martin Bligh and Andrew Morton almost manage to ban binary kernel blobs.
- Discussion on the Debian bugs mailing list about RMS VS VRMS.
- Ingo Molner produces an estimate of What is the Linux kernel worth?
- After being falsely accused by stealing his own code, Linus leads the fight back with explicitly documenting patch submission, the first paragraph is classic Linus.
- Jeremy Allison protests Microsoft-Novell Pact. (I think this started on a mailing list originally).
- In 1983, Richard Stallman goes public with his radical new ideas for a New UNIX implementation.
- The Linux kernel, the most successful ever Unix-like kernel, ported to more processor architectures than any operating system is history, started as just a hobby.
- Poul-Henning Kamp introduces the bike shed into the free software world.
- Tim Peters' classic Zen of Python (follow up)
- Jeff Waugh finally reveals the answer to the biggest mystery in free software.
Okay that is my pick, what have I missed? Please post your suggestions in the comments below.
<p><a class="reference external" href="http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.minix/browse_thread/thread/c25870d7a41696d2/6372404c547d7ab4?">Linus/Tanenbaum smashdown</a>. I believe that on that time Linus was more wise: microkernel is more advanced, but monolithic "works right".</p>