Work

Linux Kernel

project · 1991

Operating Systems Open Source

The Linux kernel is the core component of the Linux operating system family. It is a free and open-source, monolithic, modular, multitasking, Unix-like operating system kernel.

Origins

Linus Torvalds began developing the Linux kernel in 1991 while a student at the University of Helsinki. He initially created it as a personal project inspired by MINIX, a small Unix-like operating system used for teaching.

Impact

Linux has become the dominant operating system kernel in several domains:

Development Model

The Linux kernel pioneered the open-source development model at scale. Thousands of developers from hundreds of companies contribute code[5], with Torvalds and trusted maintainers managing the integration of changes.

Legacy

Linux demonstrated that a community-developed, freely available operating system could compete with and surpass proprietary alternatives. It fundamentally changed how the software industry thinks about open source.


Sources

  1. W3Techs. “Usage statistics of Unix for websites.” Reports Linux powers ~80% of web servers.
  2. TOP500. “Operating system Family / Linux.” All 500 top supercomputers run Linux as of November 2024.
  3. StatCounter. “Mobile Operating System Market Share Worldwide.” Android holds ~70% global mobile market share.
  4. The Linux Foundation. “Linux Runs All of the World’s Fastest Supercomputers, Most of the Public Cloud, IoT, and More.”
  5. Linux Foundation. “2023 Annual Report.” Documents contributions from thousands of developers representing hundreds of companies.