Systemd supremo Lennart Poettering leaves Red Hat for Microsoft
To considerable amusement in the Linux community, the infamous lead developer of systemd has a new job – at Microsoft.
The news surfaced on a Fedora mailing list when someone found that they were unable to tag Poettering in a bug report because his Red Hat Bugzilla account was disabled, to which Poettering responded that he had created a personal account.
This has caused much merriment in comment threads on sites such as Phoronix, Hacker News, and Slashdot, from "Welcome home, Agent Poettering!" to "Good work!" to various quips about future combined Linux-plus-Windows operating systems.
Although near universally adopted in almost every mainstream Linux distribution, systemd remains highly controversial, as The Reg has covered at considerable length. Despite all the furor, systemd is merely one example of a trend towards richer systems-management tools on modern xNix systems, such as SMF in Solaris and its various open-source descendants or Apple's launchd. ...
From about a week ago, though I'd missed it at the time.
This has resonance for those engaged in the Linux community. I've long been strongly leery of systemd, in roughly equal parts based on its design, on Poettering's own exceptionally abrasive personality and disregard for valid technical complaints, and a remarkably (and unpleasantly) fanboi-ish cult which grew up around the system. It's all but entirely dominated Linux distributions, including Debian, which has considerably cooled my own enthusiasm (for both Linux and Debian) over the past few years.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/07/07/lennart_poettering_red_hat_microsoft/