Australian-born Andrew Morton, a key deputy to Linux leader Linus Torvalds, has taken a job at search engine powerhouse Google, a major user of Linux and other open-source software.
"For what it's worth, I recently took a position with Google," Morton said in a posting last week to the Linux kernel mailing list. Morton is responsible for maintaining the current 2.6 version of the Linux kernel, vetting new patches and working closely with Torvalds. Morton and Torvalds are paid by a consortium, Open Source Development Labs, but Morton actually worked at a company called Digeo Interactive. Now he's moving offices to Google.
"It is beneficial to me (and to Linux) that I be in day-to-day contact with people who use Linux for real things. Hence Google is a good all-round fit," Morton said. "I shall continue my maintainership role with the Linux kernel--there should be few if any visible changes in this function."
And the Digeo position wasn't working out. "There were reorganisations at Digeo which would have changed my work situation in ways which were not attractive, and it was time to move on," Morton told Linux Today.
Google is a major user of open-source software and maintains its own variant of the standard Linux kernel housed at kernel.org. Companies such as Red Hat that sell Linux products typically use the kernel.org version as a basis for their products, but add and remove various features according to customer demand, software maturity and other criteria.






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R. Howlett - 02/05/09
I just got on Google/Linix recently. I wanted to find out about George W. Bush's life now. I admire him and was saddened to see that your search engine is now placing only negative things about the man on your site. If this is an example of the kind of crap you serve up I may have to go back to the other sites. I don't want propaganda from the Move On Idiots. I wanted information one could believe.
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