I think you guys are missing schmidtbag's real question, and the one I have too:
What in this for Linux
Great, Tesla engineers won't have to work as hard to keep their software up to date. But Linux engineers will have to work harder, subsidizing Tesla in the process.
It makes sense when they're contributing code or fixes that will improve Linux overall, but ARE they in this case?
I assume the answer is yes, and this will benefit Linux overall, otherwise the devs wouldn't have accepted the patches, but I'd be curious to hear the answer and hear exactly what they're contributing to the larger kernel.
What in this for Linux
Great, Tesla engineers won't have to work as hard to keep their software up to date. But Linux engineers will have to work harder, subsidizing Tesla in the process.
It makes sense when they're contributing code or fixes that will improve Linux overall, but ARE they in this case?
I assume the answer is yes, and this will benefit Linux overall, otherwise the devs wouldn't have accepted the patches, but I'd be curious to hear the answer and hear exactly what they're contributing to the larger kernel.
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