Greg Kroah-Hartman our next Developer Impact Live Guest on May 14th

URL for signing up: How Ampere Enables Linux Arm64 Kernel Development

We are planning our next Developer Impact Live event on May 14th, 8:00 am Pacific/ 11:00 am Eastern/ 15:00 CEST

In this episode of Developer Impact, host Dave Neary welcomes special guest Greg Kroah-Hartman, Linux Foundation Fellow and maintainer of the -stable branch, to discuss how native Arm64 hardware from Ampere supports Greg’s day-to-day Linux kernel maintenance work.

We’ll also explore the history of the Arm64 kernel, from its early days as an unwieldy kernel to today’s standardized one that powers everything from high-performance servers to mobile phones, cars, and much of the world’s embedded devices.

Greg Kroah-Hartman is a Linux Foundation Fellow and maintainer of the -stable branch. He has worked on or created several Linux kernel subsystems, including debugfs, kref, kobject, and sysfs, among many others. He has also authored or co-authored two books: Linux Device Drivers, 3rd Edition and Linux Kernel in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference.

3 Likes

This is pretty cool! I’m looking forward to talking to GregKH about his 25 years of kernel development and how Ampere hardware helps make his job easier and the Linux kernel better on Arm64 servers.

Dave.

I met him last year at the Open Source Summit Korea. He is very friendly.