"There are lots of Linux users who don't care how the kernel works, but only want to use it. That is a tribute to how good Linux is"
About this Quote
The subtext is a rebuke to a certain strain of open-source romanticism: the idea that everyone should understand the machine down to its metal. Torvalds, always allergic to sanctimony, treats ignorance not as moral failure but as product validation. People who “only want to use it” are voting for stability, usability, and trust. The kernel is doing its job precisely by fading into the background.
Context matters: Linux moved from a hobbyist OS into the backbone of servers, smartphones (via Android), and cloud infrastructure. In that world, curiosity is optional; reliability is non-negotiable. Torvalds frames that shift as a compliment to engineering discipline - clean abstractions, consistent interfaces, and a development model that can absorb massive collaboration without collapsing.
There’s also a sly inversion of the usual proprietary brag: commercial software touts “it just works” as a sales pitch. Torvalds claims the same outcome as an open-source achievement, implying that transparency and mass scrutiny don’t have to produce a nerd-only tool. They can produce something ordinary people can ignore, and that’s the point.
Quote Details
| Topic | Coding & Programming |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Pragmatist of Free Software (Linus Torvalds, 1997)
Evidence:
The fact that there are lots of Linux users who don't care how the kernel works but only want to use it is not only a tribute to how good Linux is, but it also brings up issues that I would never have thought of otherwise.. The commonly circulated short quote is truncated. The fuller primary-source wording appears in an interview with Linus Torvalds by Hiroo Yamagata titled "The Pragmatist of Free Software: Linus Torvalds Interview." Secondary references also date this interview to September 30, 1997, and some mirrors list early August 1997, but the strongest evidence from the interview text itself is that this is a late-1997 interview published online by the Tokyo Linux Users Group. It appears in response to a question about easy-to-install Linux distributions and whether users should understand what is 'under the hood.' I did not find a print book source or page number; this appears to be an online interview, so no page/chapter applies. The version often quoted as "That is a tribute to how good Linux is" omits the remainder of the sentence. Source text verified in the interview mirror and corroborated by historical references to the same interview. ([landley.net](https://www.landley.net/history/mirror/linux/linus.html)) |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Torvalds, Linus. (2026, March 8). There are lots of Linux users who don't care how the kernel works, but only want to use it. That is a tribute to how good Linux is. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-lots-of-linux-users-who-dont-care-how-157934/
Chicago Style
Torvalds, Linus. "There are lots of Linux users who don't care how the kernel works, but only want to use it. That is a tribute to how good Linux is." FixQuotes. March 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-lots-of-linux-users-who-dont-care-how-157934/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There are lots of Linux users who don't care how the kernel works, but only want to use it. That is a tribute to how good Linux is." FixQuotes, 8 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-lots-of-linux-users-who-dont-care-how-157934/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.

