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- GOG launch their Preservation Program to make games live forever with a hundred classics being 're-released'
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"This is my reality. I am not an emotionally empathetic kind of person
and that probably doesn't come as a big surprise to anybody. Least of
all me. The fact that I then misread people and don't realize (for
years) how badly I've judged a situation and contributed to an
unprofessional environment is not good.
This week people in our community confronted me about my lifetime of
not understanding emotions. My flippant attacks in emails have been
both unprofessional and uncalled for. Especially at times when I made
it personal. In my quest for a better patch, this made sense to me.
I know now this was not OK and I am truly sorry.
The above is basically a long-winded way to get to the somewhat
painful personal admission that hey, I need to change some of my
behavior, and I want to apologize to the people that my personal
behavior hurt and possibly drove away from kernel development
entirely.
I am going to take time off and get some assistance on how to
understand people’s emotions and respond appropriately."
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A negative response/harsh criticism that's respectful of your dignity can nevertheless be emotionally hard-hitting; *and that's perfectly fine*. What's *not* fine is the accompanying slight at your worth as a human being.
As I said on Twitter:
You can get a point across easily without being a rude, obnoxious and hostile. It pushes people away, people you might need, people who might do amazing things if given a decent chance.
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Again I don't want to assume too much, but if it's really the case that he genuinely couldn't wrap his head around other people's reactions to what he felt was just a way to get his point across, I find it fascinating that something managed to make it click for him after several decades of seemingly "not caring." A man his age admitting that he has such a fundamental flaw and deciding to work on it is huge, as far as I'm concerned.
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Linus should have told them to go pound sand & carry on being himself, this is a show of weakness on his part & they're never going to let it go now, I'd say he's done for good.
In other words, the filter was not skill or enthusiasm but the ability to withstand abuse. I'd hazard the opinion that it was not beneficial to Linux.
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Some might argue that if you were "skilled enough" you wouldn't get berated by him; but on the whole I agree with you. That would set the bar excessively high (who is never wrong?) and there are still much better ways to teach someone, even if it worked for some.
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The harsh taskmaster gets better results every time. EVERY TIME.
I don't care what your politics are, the outrage mob culture commonly derided as the SJW or Social Justice Warrior destroys literally everything it touches, and it does so by ratcheting up, not all at once. Code quality has always been the only thing that mattered, and if you're too thin-skinned to deal with a harshly-worded email when you screw up, then go away. If this softening becomes a trend it's step one to the end of Linux. Maybe even Step 2 according to this metric:
https://voxday.blogspot.com/2017/12/the-five-stages-of-corporate-convergence.html
Please note that Google is at stage four and Microsoft looks to be at stage three. For an example of Stage five, looks to either Marvel Comics or Starbucks, where a customers politics are put above the fact that they have money to spend and the company openly attacks their now former customers betting on a new surge of correct customers that don't actually exist in the numbers to replace the old base. Or even better, Toys 'R Us donated massive amounts of money to Planned Parenthood in order to fund abortions of the babies that would have been their customers. Because it was correct politics.
Step two is the taskmaster softening up, handing the reigns over to the younger and less capable but correct in their politics. Linus's daughter is an SJW from the looks of things, and she's a code monkey. So this could be very bad long term.
I think that the one thing Linux has going for it to mitigate all of this is that anyone at any time can fork the whole OS and then do they own thing. The problem is, like with systemD - everyone hates it, but everyone uses it because Red Hat - is that a converged corporation becomes the defacto standard, your new fork will be supported by you and only you.