Linus Torvalds Calls NVIDIA The Worst Company Ever

Posted by Michael Larabel on June 17, 2012

Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel, has called out NVIDIA for their poor graphics drivers / support in a public presentation. In the talk he called NVIDIA "the single worst company we have ever dealt with" and ended his green comments with "NVIDIA: FUCK YOU!"

Torvalds was speaking earlier this week at the Aalto Center for Entrepreneurship in Otaniemi, Finland. He spoke for one hour and his entire interview with public Q&A is available via the YouTube video embedded below.

Near the end of his talk, when asked by one of the attendees about NVIDIA's hardware support and lack of open-source driver enablement / documentation, he had a few choice words for the Santa Clara company.

Torvalds began by stating that NVIDIA is an exception to Linux support rather than the rule in terms of their lack of friendliness towards open-source drivers and the Linux community, etc. He also mentioned he is happy to publicly point them out and their problems, so his NVIDIA statements continued...

After saying that NVIDIA is "one of the worst trouble spots we've had with hardware manufacturers", Linus Torvalds continued on to say, "NVIDIA has been the single worst company we have ever dealt with."

Torvalds ended his NVIDIA comments with "NVIDIA: FUCK YOU!" while raising his middle finger to the camera.

With the YouTube video embedded below, the NVIDIA comments begin at 49 minutes into the video.

NVIDIA does produce closed-source Linux drivers that are highly regarded by many; for a majority of Linux desktop users they do work out better than the closed-source AMD Catalyst Linux drivers. However, many still want to see NVIDIA provide open-source graphics drivers from NVIDIA for their GeForce/Quadro and Tegra components.

Right now the open-source NVIDIA graphics drivers come via the Nouveau driver project, which is community-based and the driver is written via reverse-engineering NVIDIA's closed-source driver. AMD may have a notorious binary graphics driver, but at least they do provide open-source driver support, some level of documentation, and better interact with the Linux community.

I'm not sure if I would call NVIDIA the worst company ever for Linux since they do at least have the high-quality binary Linux drivers, while there exists other companies with really nasty binary drivers, bad open-source support, and other issues -- such as VIA Technologies. There's also other companies that are not friendly towards Linux at all, but just tell their customers to use Windows instead of Linux.

Aside from NVIDIA not being open-source friendly, NVIDIA Corp does have other fundamental Linux problems as I've explained. It still seems NVIDIA marketing/PR doesn't even want to work with Linux, etc.

From the several NVIDIA Linux engineers I've dealt with over the past eight years, they seem to do their best and are committed to Linux, but management and others above them seem to be where the trouble is at and tie the developers' hands. This is a similar situation to how a Texas Instruments driver developer is so committed to open-source he ended up writing a reverse-engineered open-source driver for his competitor (Qualcomm) since he was prevented from writing an open-source PowerVR driver for TI's OMAP.

Aside from Torvalds' NVIDIA remarks near the end, the entire talk is worth watching.


Discuss this article in our forums, IRC channel, or email the author. You can also follow our content via RSS and on social networks like Facebook, Identi.ca, and Twitter (@Phoronix and @MichaelLarabel). Subscribe to Phoronix Premium to view our content without advertisements, view entire articles on a single page, and experience other benefits.
Latest Hardware Reviews
  1. Sumo Lounge Emperor
  2. Gallium3D Continues Improving OpenGL For Older Radeon GPUs
  3. 15-Way Open vs. Closed Source NVIDIA/AMD Linux GPU Comparison
  4. Nouveau vs. NVIDIA Linux Comparison Shows Shortcomings
Latest Software Articles
  1. Intel Linux OpenGL Driver Leading Over Apple OS X
  2. The Cost Of Ubuntu Disk Encryption
  3. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  4. AMD Radeon R600 GPU LLVM 3.3 Back-End Testing
Latest Linux News
  1. Debian GNU/Hurd 2013 Release Brings New Packages
  2. Intel Ultrabook Performance Is Faster With Mesa 9.2
  3. Hot Relocation HDD To SSD Support For Btrfs
  4. Phoronix Test Suite 4.6.0 "Utsira" Released
  5. New Intel X.Org Driver Supports All Of Haswell
  6. SQLite Now Faster With Memory Mapped I/O
  7. Microsoft Releases Skype For Linux 4.2, Has Bug-Fixes
  8. Qt For Tizen Launches, Based On Qt 5.1
  9. KTAP Released For Linux Kernel Dynamic Tracing
  10. Linux 3.10-rc2 Kernel Takes In A Few Extra Pulls
  11. QEMU 1.5 Supports VGA Passthrough, Better USB 3.0
Latest Forum Talk
  1. Microsoft Releases Skype For Linux 4.2, Has...
  2. Debian GNU/Hurd 2013 Release Brings New Packages
  3. Hot Relocation HDD To SSD Support For Btrfs
  4. Kubuntu, KDE Has Little Hope For Ubuntu's Mir
  5. QEMU 1.5 Supports VGA Passthrough, Better USB 3.0
  6. SQLite Now Faster With Memory Mapped I/O
  1. Computers
  2. Display Drivers
  3. Graphics Cards
  4. Motherboards
  5. Peripherals
  6. Processors
  7. Software
  8. Operating Systems
  9. All Articles
  1. Linux Benchmarking
  2. OpenBenchmarking.org
  3. Phoronix Test Suite