this post was submitted on 13 Feb 2025
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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Like many others, I thankful for the contributions to Linux. It is great to be able to leave proprietary systems. But the Linux kernel has a major maintainer and leadership problem that is holding back possible contributors. It quite simply isn't living up to its potential.

The Linux Foundation seems to prioritise everything but Linux, the kernel still uses technologies and tools from another era (mailinglists, C), and from the outside the kernel looks like an uninviting, unwelcoming, and uncomfortable place to participate in.

With more focused allocation of resources, there could be lots more people making a living working on Linux. Imagine being able to intern there because of an internship programming. Imagine being able to be able to apply as a junior developer with little kernel knowledge to apply there and learn the ropes to become a fully fledged kernel dev. Imagine their being training courses and introduction sessions, kernel workshops, and live kernel dev sessions multiple times a day to cover every timezone where devs and non-devs alike could join to learn more about the kernel and how to contribute or get a job there. Imagine companies could talk to teams at the Linux foundation's to help them get their drivers into the kernel or even be guided to affiliated companies to write drivers for their devices.

The kernel of course doesn't just need devs It needs technical writers, marketing teams, outreach programmes at school, universities, government institutions, and it needs an arm that somehow talks to the public to get feedback on features they require or request and a way to get feedback from users (private and corporate alike).

Just imagine the possibilities if things we run and prioritised differently. The potential to spread opensource far and wide would be amazing. Maybe we can still get there and I hope we do. Having someone as motivated as Marcan being nearly burned out from internal conflict is regrettable.

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