"People who think SD was 'perfect' were simply ignoring reality," Linus Torvalds began in a succinct explanation as to
why he chose the CFS scheduler written by Ingo Molnar instead of the SD scheduler written by Con Kolivas. He continued,
"sadly, that seemed to include Con too, which was one of the main reasons that I never [entertained] the notion of merging SD for very long at all: Con ended up arguing against people who reported problems, rather than trying to work with them." He went on to stress the importance of working toward a solution that is good for everyone,
"that was where the SD patches fell down. They didn't have a maintainer that I could trust to actually care about any other issues than his own." Update: OSNews user
superstoned pointed us to
the other side of the story.
Member since:
2006-02-11
there's always two sides to every story. Even though Linus can sometimes express very strong confrontational views over philosophical or ideological aspects of open source,it's nice to see the side of him we rarely do or that's rarely reported,i.e the pragmatic level headedness that he clearly possesses and has demonstrated many times before in the past.Good articles :>