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Linux Format interview archive
One-to-one discussions with major players in the Linux world, taken from previous issues of LXF
(Click here for a full list of earlier magazine articles)
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Bruce Perens (LXF 79, May 2006)
Once the Debian Project Leader, Bruce is a respected spokesman for for the open source world
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Edd Dumbill and Niel Bornstein (LXF 78, April 2006)
Two Mono hackers (and book authors) discuss their love for C#, and whether we should be concerned about Microsoft and software patents
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Chris DiBona (LXF 77, March 2006)
Former game developer and VA executive explains how Linux is used at Google
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Jeremy Allison (LXF 76, February 2006)
Samba bridges the divide between Windows and Linux systems. Core developer Jeremy Allison looks ahead to Samba 4...
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Larry Wall (LXF 75, January 2006)
Eccentric Perl founder reveals his through processes for the long-in-development Perl 6
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Andrew Morton (LXF 74, Christmas 2005)
Kernel 2.6 maintainer speaks out about version control and bugs in the source code
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Eben Moglen (LXF 73, December 2005)
What does the GPL v3 mean for developers and end-users? The Free Software Foundation's top legal counsel explains all
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Richard Hipp (LXF 73, December 2005)
You need to be a very good programmer to contribute to SQLite. Richard reveals why his code standards are so high
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Michael Meeks (LXF 72, November 2005)
Once writing assembler games on Windows, now a staunch Gnome fan working on OpenOffice.org. We ask: why is OOo so slow?
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Mark Shuttleworth (LXF 71, October 2005)
Millionaire, space tourist and now Ubuntu founder. Mark explains why he's backing the
distro, and its relationship with Debian
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Gael Duval (LXF 70, September 2005)
Mandriva has gone from near collapse to success, and we ask its co-founder:
how will the Conectiva and Lycoris mergers pan out?
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Alan Cox (LXF 69, August 2005)
Second only to Linus Torvalds in kernel hacking prowess, Alan
certainly knows how to keep things calm in a flame war...
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Michael Robertson (LXF 68, July 2005)
Former MP3.com owner turned open source advocate and Linspire founder defies claims that running as root is dangerous
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Matthias Ettrich (LXF 67, June 2005)
Created the KDE project, went to work for Trolltech, and now reveals why
all those 'K'-starting app names still annoy us today
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Stephen Tweedie (LXF 66, May 2005)
He's the filesystem supremo, the man behind ext3, and he gives us an insight into the world of kernel hacking
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Miguel de Icaza (LXF 65, April 2005)
After spearheading the Gnome project, Miguel now works on Mono at Novell. But just how close is it to Microsoft .NET?
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Guido van Rossum (LXF 64, March 2005)
A programming language can be powerful and "really boring" at the same time, as
Python creator Guido discusses
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Nat Friedman (LXF 63, February 2005)
Novell Linux Desktop and Sun's JDS are going head-to-head on the corporate
desktop. Ximian co-founder Nat has the low-down
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Damian Conway (LXF 62, January 2005)
One of the best-known Perl hackers, Damian gives us an insight into working alongside Larry Wall
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[ Back to Interviews | Sections index ]
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"Buying the right computer and getting it to work properly is no more complicated than building a nuclear reactor from wristwatch parts in a darkened room using only your teeth."
-- Dave Barry |
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