>True, people are different. Some people I would like to work with, and some 
>people I wouldn't (like Linus Torvalds). His argument that >social norms are 
>irreverent to creating software (or should be) rings pretty hollow, in my 
>opinion. 
                              ~~~~~~~~
Perhaps there’s some truth in AutoCorrect there ... What, exactly, I don’t know.
>Collaborating on software (or encyclopedias) is a social process, and basic 
>civility goes a long way towards lubricating social processes. >I also don't 
>buy Linus's argument that being professional is being fake. No one is asking 
>Linus to wear a suit and tie and use marketing >buzzwords. They're just asking 
>him to chill out and not be an asshole. Of course he's welcome to act out his 
>"normal urges", as he puts >it, but I don't think he's doing any favors for 
>the cultural health of the free software movement.
I really wonder if we’re looking at this backward. It almost sounds from your 
interpretation that Linus (whom in fairness I have never met or interacted 
with, not least because I’m not a Linux groupie, so I can’t speak to the truth 
of this) seems to have founded an open-source software community as a place for 
people, uh, “on spectrum” to hang out online and work together on something in 
their preferred way, rather than had the idea for Linux and then, well, all 
these people just happened to gravitate to it.
Daniel Case


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