Congrats Linux Foundation Scholarship Winners!

As of yet, I am the youngest person ever to have received a scholarship from the Linux Foundation. They messed up my description, but I don't care. Yes, I'm RJ.

"Developer Do-Gooder

Yashdeep Saini, 21, India - A graduate of NMIMS University Mumbai, Yashdeep has a particular interest in cybersecurity. He has recently started playing with ELF headers to understand the working of loaders and memory organization needed for Linux. His goal is to become a kernel developer, targeting the possible exploitation vectors and trying to find solutions to fight them.

Toby Jee, 37, Australia - Toby is a software developer at Innovit in Sydney, who currently contributes to Linux development with his own projects on GitHub and Bitbucket. He hopes that formal Linux training will enable him to contribute to Linux documentation, especially around Fedora One - his preferred distribution. He is also passionate about education and would like to teach children about open source by showing them how to use Raspberry Pi’s with Pidora.

Kernel Guru

Kiran Padwal, 27, India - Kiran is a software engineer at Smartplay Technologies in Pune. He has submitted basic patches to stabilize the kernel to check error for memory managed resource APIs to allocate memory, checkpatch warnings and device tree support for i2c devices and was part of da9055 codec device driver development. He hopes to gain a deeper understanding of the kernel through training so he can submit more and higher quality patches.

Vaishali Thakkar, 20, India - Vaishali is a Linux Kernel Intern through Outreachy, whose first contribution to the Linux kernel was running Coccinelle semantic patch over staging directory files. These days she is working on removing module init/exit boilerplate code with standard helper macros and has introduced some new helper macros herself. She hopes to eventually rise to the level of kernel maintainer.

Linux Newbies

Kevin Barry, 32, Ireland - Kevin holds a PhD in music and taught himself programming in his spare time. Inspired by a lecture given by Linux Foundation Fellow Greg Kroah-Hartman, he submitted his first patch for LilyPond. He has since completed the free Intro to Linux course with edX and put that knowledge to use by automating some of his work with shell scripts. He hopes to become a Linux SysAdmin to move his music department to open source.

Junko Ueda, 43, Japan - Junko completed the free Intro to Linux course with edX but also has some experience managing customer databases on Linux. She left the workforce to be a stay-at-home mom and now wants to become certified as a Linux SysAdmin as a way to break back in. She loves that there’s so many things to discover about Linux, that you can never be bored with it.

SysAdmin Superstar

Erich Noriega, 37, Canada - Born in Mexico, Erich recently moved to Canada with his partner. He previously worked on an electronic government initiative in Mexico, using Linux for running load balancers and DNS Roundrobbins. Since moving, he has been working on a prototype for an embedded PI hardware and pressure and temperature sensors for his partner’s family’s maple syrup plantation. He hopes formal training will enable him to build a career in his adopted country.

Enrique Sevillano, 42, United States - Enrique is the IT manager at White River Electric Association, where he has worked on everything from storage to filesystems to virtualization from Microsoft to Linux. He hopes that formal training through this scholarship will enable him to move onto more complex topics, such as penetration testing and cloud solutions.

Teens-in-Training

Eduardo Mayorga Téllez, 17, Nicaragua - Eduardo has been using Linux since he was 9 years old. He is starting an electronic engineering degree at the Nicaraguan National University of Engineering and hopes to use that to become a kernel developer focused on driver development. He has heard the argument that people don’t want to use Linux due to hardware compatibility and plans to be the person to change that.

RJ Murdok, 15, United States - RJ is getting ready to start his freshman year of high school. Despite being legally blind, he’s been learning Linux for three years and submits bug reports in his spare time. He recently built a computer for the first time and plans to install openSUSE on it. His goal is to work with Linux in robotics and perhaps also teach Linux at the university level one day.

Whiz Kids

Anthony Hooper, 23, Jamaica - Anthony originally took the safe route in Jamaica, studying hospitality management at university but his true passion is technology. He taught himself to use the command line and has never looked back. He hopes the knowledge he gains from this scholarship will enable him to get a job as a Linux SysAdmin, and then plans to share that knowledge by teaching Linux to children in his local community.

Kyri'ay Vanderpoel, 22, United States - Kyri’ay works as a helpdesk technician at Systeem Medical while studying computer science at the University of North Texas. His father introduced him to Arch Linux when he was 17, and he’s been learning more about it ever since. His goal is to work in secure development, penetration testing, cloud security, or database designs after graduation and thinks a formal Linux training course will help him achieve that.

Women in Linux

Nancy Iris Quiroga, 33, Argentina - Nancy is a biologist who taught herself Linux to use with statistical analysis, GIS and graphic design. She hopes to design open source applications for analyzing biological data, as most programs currently available are proprietary.

Eva Tanaskoska, 22, Macedonia - Eva is an information security researcher at Zero Science Lab in Skopje, which studying computer science and engineering at Ss. Cyril and Methodius University. She is in the process of forming a CERT team at her university, where she mentors students on using Linux to perform penetration tests, forensic investigations and incident response. Eva hopes to one day focus full time on kernel development and Linux security research."

http://www.linuxfoundation.org/news-media/announcements/2015/08/linux-foundation-announces-2015-linux-training-scholarship

Edit: looked at it again and realized I submitted this in May or June. At that time I was not running openSUSE. I think I may have mentioned robotics. Besides that everything is fine. I just read it too fast.

5 Likes

Congrats

1 Like

Congratulations man, it seems like you've truly found something that brings you happiness.

1 Like

congrats man very cool indeed!

1 Like

Well done mate!

1 Like

Oh that's cool, I had no idea they did that.

I think around 15 maybe just a little older I ordered a free copy of SUSE Professional (I think that's what it was called then) from the Novell who ran the SUSE enterprise stuff. Came from the US in the post which was cool. And better than trying to download an ISO on dialup.

Congrats.

1 Like

Congrats. I didn't even know such thing existed, neat!

1 Like

I would just leave key to thank all of you. I plan to do great things with my scholarship, and I hope this among my AP classes is something that a college down the road will recognize.

I learned a ton about Linux by using openSUSE, Fedora, AOSP, Mint, and Arch (it took me 7 hours to install due to my vision but I do have it set up. While I will say that I enjoy the fact that Arch is compatible with most software, it is a pain to get everything working. For instance, when you figure out why virtual-manager and libvirtd aren't working, now you need to find out why the audio isn't working and this is an unnecessary practice,. I'm sure you all have your distro of preference and for me that's openSUSE. I never really cared about KDE vs Gnome. Gnome is a bit more accessible, but Plasma just worked. How ver, as of Monday Gnome should've been patched. I'm not sure if 3.17.9 made it to the Tumbleweed repos yet but I will try to get Clutter to cooperate with the magnifier even further. One of the Dee's said Gnome will have to go through a lot of changes soon and clutter is to the point of needing a rewrite so I'd expect 3.19 to become 4.0 like the Linux kernel at this point.

One again, thank you all.

1 Like

That is truly inspirational! I needed to read this today; faith in humanity restored! My flavors of choice are Debian and CentOS, but hey, pick your poison! I like the hardware compatibility of Debian and the power and stability of CentOS for running servers.

1 Like