Andrew Morton is a Linux kernel developer. He maintains a patchset known as the mm tree, which contains not yet sufficiently tested patches that might later be accepted into the official 2.6 kernel maintained by Linus Torvalds.
Andrew Morton delivered the keynote speech at the 2004 Ottawa Linux Symposium.
In the late 1980s, he was one of the partners of a company in Sydney, Australia that produced a kit computer called the Applix 1616.
He is an expert witness in the SCO v. IBM lawsuit contesting UNIX copyrights. [1]
In August of 2006, Morton was hired by Google but will continue his current work in maintaining the kernel. [2] [3]
He is also known as akpm on the LKML, and his website has his username as akpm.
References
- ^ Groklaw, July 19, 2006
- ^ Linux kernel mailing list, August 6, 2006
- ^ Linux Today, August 3, 2006
External links
- Andrew Morton's homepage
- Interview: Andrew Morton; Jeremy Andrews; Kerneltrap; February 14, 2002.
- Interview; Nadia Cameron; LinuxWorld; July 16, 2003.
- Keynote speech; Ottawa Linux Symposium, 2004
- Interview; Ingrid Marson; ZDNet UK; May 05, 2006.
- Audio of Talk at SDForum
- Link to his patches