"I used to be interested in Windows NT, but the more I see it, the more it looks like traditional Windows with a stabler kernel. I don't find anything technically interesting there"
About this Quote
Torvalds is doing what he’s always done best: puncturing hype with an engineer’s boredom. The jab isn’t that Windows NT is bad; it’s that it’s disappointingly conventional. “Traditional Windows with a stabler kernel” is a backhanded compliment that frames NT as an incremental repair job rather than a conceptual leap. Stability becomes table stakes, not a selling point. The real insult lands in “I don’t find anything technically interesting there,” a line that weaponizes indifference. In tech culture, contempt is loud; disinterest is the coldest verdict.
The context matters: NT arrived with a serious architecture story and enterprise ambitions, a deliberate break from the crash-prone consumer Windows lineage. Torvalds acknowledges that break, then shrugs. Subtext: even when Microsoft improves, it does so by sanding down liabilities, not by opening new frontiers. For a developer who built Linux partly as a statement about openness, modularity, and the joy of tinkering, NT’s virtues are also its aesthetic failure: proprietary, polished, centrally authored. It works; you can’t really play with it.
There’s also a status move here. Torvalds positions “interesting” as the ultimate currency, implying that the competitive battleground isn’t market share but elegance, transparency, and intellectual thrill. Calling him merely a “businessman” misses the point: this is an identity claim from a culture where technical taste doubles as moral posture. NT might win offices; Torvalds is arguing Linux wins minds.
The context matters: NT arrived with a serious architecture story and enterprise ambitions, a deliberate break from the crash-prone consumer Windows lineage. Torvalds acknowledges that break, then shrugs. Subtext: even when Microsoft improves, it does so by sanding down liabilities, not by opening new frontiers. For a developer who built Linux partly as a statement about openness, modularity, and the joy of tinkering, NT’s virtues are also its aesthetic failure: proprietary, polished, centrally authored. It works; you can’t really play with it.
There’s also a status move here. Torvalds positions “interesting” as the ultimate currency, implying that the competitive battleground isn’t market share but elegance, transparency, and intellectual thrill. Calling him merely a “businessman” misses the point: this is an identity claim from a culture where technical taste doubles as moral posture. NT might win offices; Torvalds is arguing Linux wins minds.
Quote Details
| Topic | Coding & Programming |
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