Linux creator Linus Torvalds wins Millennium Tech Prize
Published Jun 13 2012, 15:52 BST | By Mark Langshaw
Linux creator Linus Torvalds has been named as the joint winner of the Millennium Tech Prize 2012.The software engineer, who worked on the operating system kernel for more than two decades, will share the gong with stem cell scientist Dr Shinya Yamanaka.

© Rex Features / Kimmo Mantyla
Technology Academy Finland honoured Torvalds for his influence in the fields of "shared software development, networking and the openness of the web".
"This recognition is particularly important to me, given that it's given by the Technology Academy of Finland," Tovalds said.
"I'd also like to thank all the people I've worked with, who have helped make the project not only such a technical success, but have made it so fun and interesting."
The Linux kernel is one of the most prominent examples of free and open source software. It was first released in 1991, when Torvalds was a student at the University of Helsinki.
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This was the first time that the biennial Millennium Tech Prize has been shared. Each winner was awarded €600,000 (£483,000).









I've an award for him too. For continually pushing the boundaries within an OS which was dead ages ago. Yonks. Donkey's years. To think that we're all banging on about intuitive UI's these days when there is a perfectly good jumped up ******* version of DOS we could all be using.
June 14th 2012 at 2:26pm