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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)


Bruce Perens (LXF 79, May 2006)

Once the Debian Project Leader, Bruce is a respected spokesman for for the open source world
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
Chris DiBona (LXF 77, March 2006)

Former game developer and VA executive explains how Linux is used at Google
Jeremy Allison (LXF 76, February 2006)

Samba bridges the divide between Windows and Linux systems. Core developer Jeremy Allison looks ahead to Samba 4...
Larry Wall (LXF 75, January 2006)

Eccentric Perl founder reveals his through processes for the long-in-development Perl 6
Andrew Morton (LXF 74, Christmas 2005)

Kernel 2.6 maintainer speaks out about version control and bugs in the source code
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
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
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?
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
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?
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...
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
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
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
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?
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
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
Damian Conway (LXF 62, January 2005)

One of the best-known Perl hackers, Damian gives us an insight into working alongside Larry Wall
  

[ Back to Interviews | Sections index ]

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