Richard Stallman
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Richard Matthew Stallman |
His influence was essential for establishing the moral, political, and legal framework for the free software movement, as an alternative to proprietary software development and distribution.
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2 Free software vs. open source 3 Recognition 4 References |
Stallman was born on March 16, 1953 in Manhattan to Alice Lippman and Daniel Stallman.
In the 1960s, with the first personal computer still a decade away, Stallmans' first chance to get access to a computer came during his junior year of high school. Hired on at the IBM New York Scientific Center, a now-defunct research facility in downtown Manhattan, Stallman spent the summer after high-school graduation writing his first program, a pre-processor for the IBM 7094 written in the programming language /A>. "I first wrote it in PL/I program was too big to fit in the computer," he recalls (Williams 2002, chapter 3).
After that job at the IBM Scientific Center, Stallman held a laboratory-assistant position in the biology department at Rockefeller University. Although he was already moving toward a career in mathematics or physics, Stallman's analytical mind impressed the lab director enough that a few years after Stallman departed for college, Stallman's mother, Lippman received an unexpected phone call. "It was the professor at Rockefeller," she says. "He wanted to know how Richard was doing. He was surprised to learn that he was working in computers. He'd always thought Richard had a great future ahead of him as a biologist." (Williams 2002, chapter 3)
In 1971, as a freshman at Harvard University, Stallman became a hacker at the MIT AI Laboratory.
In the 1980s, the hacker community which was Stallman's life began to dissolve under the pressure of the commercialization of the software industry.
In particular, other AI Lab hackers founded the company Symbolics, which actively attempted to replace the free software in the Lab with its own proprietary software.
For two years, from 1983 to 1985, Stallman single-handedly duplicated the efforts of the Symbolics programmers to prevent them from gaining a monopoly on the Lab's computers. By that time, however, he was the last of his generation of hackers at the Lab. He was asked to sign non-disclosure agreements and perform other actions he considered betrayals of his principles of sharing with others and helping his neighbor. Stallman eventually left MIT in January 1984 to work on the GNU system, which he had started in September 1983. He has worked on GNU more or less full-time since then, and did not complete a doctoral degree. He has been awarded two honary doctoral degrees (see Recognition).
In 1985, Stallman published the GNU Manifesto, which asserted his intentions and motivations for creating a free alternative to the Unix operating system, which he dubbed GNU (GNU's Not Unix).
Soon after he incorporated the non-profit Free Software Foundation to coordinate the effort.
He invented the concept of copyleft which was embodied in the GNU General Public License (commonly known as the "GPL") in 1989.
Much of the GNU system, except for the Hurd kernel, was completed at about the same time.
In 1991, Linus Torvalds released the Linux kernel under the GPL, creating a complete and operational GNU system, the GNU/Linux (commonly referred to as simply Linux) operating system.
Richard Stallman's political and moral motivations have made him a controversial figure.
Many influential programmers who agree with the concept of sharing code disagree with Stallman's moral stance, personal philosophy, or the language he has used to describe his positions.
One result of these disputes was the establishment of an alternative to the free software movement, the open source movement.
Stallman has received numerous prizes and awards for his work, amongst them:
Biography
Decay of the hacker culture
Founding GNU
Free software vs. open source
Recognition
References
See also
Bibliography
External links