"I've found only two things that last 'til the end One is your heroes, the other's your friends." |
-- Randy Travis/Don Schlitz |
Could it be that one of the reasons the Linux phenomena is so strong is that it fulfills the above? Quick, without thinking, name one or two people you really look up to. Chances are, since you're using Linux, the names of Torvalds, Raymond or Stallman may have flashed through your mind.
As members of the Linux community, we have heroes. We have people we can look up to. We have heroes we can look up to and still disagree with. Can we say the same of our physical communities, our companies, our nations?
And what of friends? Think about the mailing lists you belong to, the news groups you read, and the Linux users group you belong to - who do you turn to when you need advice about your latest upgrade?
Does commercial software and Microsoft give you the same feeling? Can they compete with the feeling you just had while thinking about what Linus has wrought and the last helpful Linux-related email you received?
Community! That's what this is really all about. It's about having the best operating system, and the best software and the best support. It's about having the best. Period. And we know the best is still to come.
The question is often asked, "Will Linux be able to defeat the marketing muscle of Microsoft?" We already know the answer. And the answer is being provided by the growing number of people who use Linux as an everyday solution to their own needs.
Will there be an 'office suite'? Probably. But that's not what brought us to Linux in the first place, is it? So, why are you here?
What makes Linux really special is the people you never hear about in the press. The people who patch software and give it back to the community - you all know someone who's done this, or helped you with a shell script, or guided you as you learned more about Linux. You also know someone who is maintaining a Linux site, writing a driver or volunteering in some way to bring Linux to fruition. Linux is what it is because thousands of people, every day, contribute in small ways to Linux's success.
Heroes help you see a goal worth attaining. Your friends help you get there. When someone new to Linux asks a question, what they are really asking for is a friend's advice. Be there for them.
So, the next time some one asks you why you are using Linux, smile and think, "That's how it goes, with heroes and friends."