Tux (mascot): Difference between revisions
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==Origins== |
==Origins== |
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[[File:TheStoryBehindTux.jpg|thumb|The story behind Tux, Canberra Zoo]] |
[[File:TheStoryBehindTux.jpg|thumb|The story behind Tux, Canberra Zoo]] |
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The concept of the [[Linux]] mascot being a [[penguin]] came from [[Linus Torvalds]], the creator of [[Linux_kernel | Linux]]. Tux was created by [[Larry Ewing]] in 1996 after an initial suggestion made by [[Alan Cox]]<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9605/0237.html Re: Linux logo]</ref> and further refined by Linus Torvalds on the [[Linux kernel mailing list]].<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9605/0855.html Re: Linux Logo prototype]</ref> Torvalds took his inspiration from a photograph<ref>[ftp://ftp.cs.helsinki.fi/pub/Software/Linux/Kernel/v1.3/ccpenguin.jpg The photo] that inspired [[Linus Torvalds]]</ref> he found on an [[File Transfer Protocol|FTP]] site,<ref>[http://lkml.org/lkml/1996/5/6/44 Re: Linux logo]</ref> showing a penguin [[figurine]] looking strangely like the ''[[Creature Comforts]]'' characters made by [[Nick Park]]. The first person to call the penguin "Tux" was James Hughes, who said that it stood for "(T)orvalds (U)ni(X)".<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9606.1/0175.html Re: Let's name the penguin! (was: Re: Linux 2.0 really _is_ released..)]</ref> However, ''tux'' is also an abbreviation of [[tuxedo]], the outfit which springs to mind when one sees a penguin. |
The concept of the [[Linux]] mascot being a [[penguin]] came from [[Linus Torvalds]], the creator of [[Linux_kernel | Linux]]. Tux was created by [[Larry Ewing]] in 1996 after an initial suggestion made by [[Alan Cox]]<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9605/0237.html Re: Linux logo]</ref> and further refined by Linus Torvalds on the [[Linux kernel mailing list]].<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9605/0855.html Re: Linux Logo prototype]</ref> Torvalds took his inspiration from a photograph<ref>[ftp://ftp.cs.helsinki.fi/pub/Software/Linux/Kernel/v1.3/ccpenguin.jpg The photo] that inspired [[Linus Torvalds]]</ref> he found on an [[File Transfer Protocol|FTP]] site,<ref>[http://lkml.org/lkml/1996/5/6/44 Re: Linux logo]</ref> showing a penguin [[figurine]] looking strangely like the ''[[Creature Comforts]]'' characters made by [[Nick Park]]. The first person to call the penguin "Tux" was James Hughes, who said that it stood for "(T)orvalds (U)ni(X)".<ref>[http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9606.1/0175.html Re: Let's name the penguin! (was: Re: Linux 2.0 really _is_ released..)]</ref> However, ''tux'' is also an abbreviation of [[tuxedo]], the outfit which springs to mind when one sees a penguin.Of India |
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Tux was originally designed as a submission for a Linux [[logo]] contest. Three such competitions took place; Tux won none of them. This is why Tux is formally known as the Linux ''mascot'' and not the ''logo''.<ref>[http://www.sjbaker.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_History_of_Tux_the_Linux_Penguin The History of Tux the Linux Penguin]</ref> Tux was created<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.isc.tamu.edu/~lewing/linux/notes.html|title=Notes on creation|author=Larry Ewing|accessdate=2007-07-31}}</ref> by Larry Ewing using the first publicly released<ref>{{cite book |last= Bunks |first=Carey |title= Grokking the GIMP |year=2000 |publisher= New Riders |isbn=0-7357-0924-6 |url=http://gug.sunsite.dk/docs/Grokking-the-GIMP-v1.0/node14.html }}</ref> version (0.54) of [[GIMP]], a [[free software]] graphics package. It was released by him under the following condition: |
Tux was originally designed as a submission for a Linux [[logo]] contest. Three such competitions took place; Tux won none of them. This is why Tux is formally known as the Linux ''mascot'' and not the ''logo''.<ref>[http://www.sjbaker.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_History_of_Tux_the_Linux_Penguin The History of Tux the Linux Penguin]</ref> Tux was created<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.isc.tamu.edu/~lewing/linux/notes.html|title=Notes on creation|author=Larry Ewing|accessdate=2007-07-31}}</ref> by Larry Ewing using the first publicly released<ref>{{cite book |last= Bunks |first=Carey |title= Grokking the GIMP |year=2000 |publisher= New Riders |isbn=0-7357-0924-6 |url=http://gug.sunsite.dk/docs/Grokking-the-GIMP-v1.0/node14.html }}</ref> version (0.54) of [[GIMP]], a [[free software]] graphics package. It was released by him under the following condition: |
Revision as of 07:56, 12 September 2012
Tux is a penguin character and the official mascot of the Linux kernel.[1] Originally created as an entry to a Linux logo competition, Tux is the most commonly used icon for Linux, although different Linux distributions depict Tux in various styles. In video games featuring the character, female counterparts, named Penny and Gown, accompany him. The character is used in many other Linux programs and as a general symbol of Linux.
Origins
The concept of the Linux mascot being a penguin came from Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux. Tux was created by Larry Ewing in 1996 after an initial suggestion made by Alan Cox[2] and further refined by Linus Torvalds on the Linux kernel mailing list.[3] Torvalds took his inspiration from a photograph[4] he found on an FTP site,[5] showing a penguin figurine looking strangely like the Creature Comforts characters made by Nick Park. The first person to call the penguin "Tux" was James Hughes, who said that it stood for "(T)orvalds (U)ni(X)".[6] However, tux is also an abbreviation of tuxedo, the outfit which springs to mind when one sees a penguin.Of India
Tux was originally designed as a submission for a Linux logo contest. Three such competitions took place; Tux won none of them. This is why Tux is formally known as the Linux mascot and not the logo.[7] Tux was created[8] by Larry Ewing using the first publicly released[9] version (0.54) of GIMP, a free software graphics package. It was released by him under the following condition:
Permission to use and/or modify this image is granted provided you acknowledge me lewing@isc.tamu.edu and The GIMP if someone asks.[10]
According to Jeff Ayers, Linus Torvalds had a "fixation for flightless, fat waterfowl" and Torvalds claims to have contracted "penguinitis" after being gently nibbled by a penguin: "Penguinitis makes you stay awake at nights just thinking about penguins and feeling great love towards them." Torvalds' supposed illness is a joke, but he really was bitten by a Little Penguin on a visit to the National Zoo & Aquarium, Canberra, Australia.[11] Torvalds was looking for something fun and sympathetic to associate with Linux, and a slightly fat penguin sitting down after having had a great meal perfectly fit the bill.[12]
In an interview Linus commented on the penguin bite:
I've been to Australia several times, these days mostly for Linux.Conf.Au. But my first trip—and the one when I was bitten by a ferocious Fairy Penguin: you really should keep those things locked up!—was in 93 or so, talking about Linux for the Australian Unix Users Group.[13]
Uses
In some Linux distributions, Tux greets the user during booting, with multi-processor systems displaying multiple images of Tux, one for each processor-core. Tux appeared as a character during one arc in the webcomic User Friendly. TUX is the name of a Linux-based web server. In 1999, Corel Linux Deluxe included a free Linux Penguin (Tux).[14]
Video games
Tux has taken on a role in the Linux community similar to that which Mario holds in the Nintendo community. He has been featured in open-source look-alikes of other mainstream games, such as Tux Racer, Extreme Tux Racer, Tux Math Scrabble, TuxWordSmith Tux Math, SuperTux, SuperTuxKart, and Tux Paint. As such, several computer games, mostly free and open source and/or for Linux, have included Tux, including:
- Age of Empires III: A real-time strategy game produced by Microsoft. One of the random names which is assigned to explorer's dogs is 'Tux the Conqueror'.[15]
- OpenArena: contains a character named "Penguin," who is a man dressed in a costume resembling Tux.
- Pingus: A Lemmings clone in which the lemmings are replaced by penguins in reference to Tux.
- SuperTux: a platform game inspired by Super Mario Bros.
- Tux Kart and SuperTuxKart: Kart racing games similar to the Mario Kart series.
- Tux Math Scrabble: Math version of the popular family game starring Tux.
- TuxWordSmith: Scrabble in over 80 languages starring Tux.
- Tux Paint: A drawing program for young children, most likely inspired by Kid Pix.
- Tux, of Math Command: a free software math tutoring arcade game.
- Tux Typing: a free software educational game designed to teach typing.
- Tux Racer: A game similar to snowboarding video games, in which the player controls Tux sliding downhill on his belly rather than humans snowboarding down a track.
- FreeCiv: A Civilization-like game; the leader name of the Antarctican civilization is "Tux". In addition, the Colossus is an enormous Tux statue, depending on the tile set selected.[citation needed]
- WarMUX: A turn-based strategy game inspired by Worms, featuring many free and open source software mascots, including Tux.
- Frozen Bubble: A free software puzzle game, featuring Tux-esque penguins.
- LinCity-NG: A free software strategy game that allows you to build a Tux statue.
Female Tux versions in video games
Some games that star Tux also include explicitly female penguin characters, allowing the players to play as one of those characters instead of Tux. One such female penguin is Tux's friend "Gown". Gown is variously depicted as being a pink version of Tux (XTux) or as having a somewhat less fat appearance and wearing items of clothing such as a red and white short skirt and a hair bow (e.g. TuxKart and A Quest for Herring). In SuperTux and SuperTuxKart, there is a different female penguin called "Penny" who is purple and white (SuperTuxKart once had Gown and still has a map called "Gown's Bow"). In the upcoming Tux 2 there is supposed to be a female penguin called "Trixi", and in FreeCiv the female leader name for the Antarctican civilization is "Tuxette".
Tux in popular culture
- The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, the American Hockey League affiliate of the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins, anamorphic penguin mascot's name is Tux.[16]
- In the show Out of Jimmy's Head, a wisecracking, comedian penguin who often tells bad puns and jokes is called Tux.[citation needed]
- In the show The Penguins of Madagascar, an episode revealed the penguin Private's name used to be Mr. Tux.
- In a Froot Loops commercial, Tux appears as a squeaky dog toy as the "secret weapon" to distract a pack of dogs pulling a sled containing a villain.
Other uses
- Tux had an uncredited use in the Al Gore's Penguin Army video.
- During the Q&A session following his COMDEX Fall 1999 keynote address, Linus Torvalds was asked if he had any idea how many stuffed penguins had been sent to Bill Gates. Torvalds's response was another question: "To the nearest thousand?".
- There is a Pet (creature who will fight alongside your character) in the online game DragonFable that is a penguin named "Linus". Along with the tagline on the pet, he is shown to be a version of Tux.
- Tux has been adapted to a designer toy called a Gwin and is distributed by October Toys. It is redesigned by different artists and sold in short collectible runs through the October Toys website and other collectable vinyl toy sites. There are also artists who buy a blank Gwin to hand paint and customize as a one-off art piece.
- Several bloggers[17] have noted that Tux bears a striking resemblance with a cake template on the front cover of the Australian Women's Weekly "Party Animals", a cake recipe book published by ACP Magazines. The design is titled "The Penguin Prince" and no credit is given. ACP later acknowledged the similarity and added they lost track of the original template designer.[18]
- It's possible to make Tux talk using the cowsay command in Unix or Ubuntu (after installing fortune-mod and cowsay) by adding the option -f tux to it. In the following example the text in the cowsay is piped from the fortune command:
user@myhost:~$ fortune | cowsay -f tux _________________________________________ / You are scrupulously honest, frank, and \ | straightforward. Therefore you have few | \ friends. / ----------------------------------------- \ \ .--. |o_o | |:_/ | // \ \ (| | ) /'\_ _/`\ \___)=(___/
- In 2010, a monument to Tux was erected in Tyumen (Russia) by the local Linux Users Community.[19]
- Tux has also been made as a virtual pet under the name Tux Droid by Kysoh for Linux and Windows, has many features including reading tweets from Twitter and checking the weather.
- There is a free guitar tab reading/editing program called TuxGuitar, which features Tux holding a guitar as its mascot.[20]
- TUX case is a Tux shaped case for the Linux Embedded Board FOX Board G20 The website of TUX Case.
Tuz
Tuz was the mascot of the 2009 linux.conf.au conference. It has been chosen by Linus Torvalds as the logo for version 2.6.29 of the Linux kernel[21] to support the effort to save the Tasmanian devil species from extinction[22] due to the devil facial tumour disease.
The image was designed by Andrew McGown and recreated as an Inkscape SVG[23] by Josh Bush,[24] and released under Creative Commons license CC-BY-SA.[25]
Media
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Tux Crystal 1st revision
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Tux Crystal 2nd revision
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PaX version of Tux
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Slackware version of Tux
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High-quality 3D vectorized Tux
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2D vectorized Tux
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Crystallized Tux
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Make your own Tux shirt
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Tux plush toy from Novell
See also
- The BSD Daemon, the mascot of the various Berkeley Software Distribution releases
- Wilber, the mascot of GIMP
- Tux Droid
References
- ^ Linux Logos and Mascots
- ^ Re: Linux logo
- ^ Re: Linux Logo prototype
- ^ The photo that inspired Linus Torvalds
- ^ Re: Linux logo
- ^ Re: Let's name the penguin! (was: Re: Linux 2.0 really _is_ released..)
- ^ The History of Tux the Linux Penguin
- ^ Larry Ewing. "Notes on creation". Retrieved 31 July 2007.
- ^ Bunks, Carey (2000). Grokking the GIMP. New Riders. ISBN 0-7357-0924-6.
- ^ Larry Ewing. "Linux 2.0 Penguins". Retrieved 25 June 2006.
- ^ ""Tux" the Aussie Penguin". Linux Australia. Archived from the original on 7 May 2006. Retrieved 25 June 2006.
- ^ "Why a Penguin?". Linux Online. Archived from the original on 2010, 08, 15. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|archivedate=
(help) - ^ Linus Torvalds talks future of Linux (page 3) | APC Magazine
- ^ Corel Linux OS Deluxe, Corel Corporation, 1999.
- ^ [1] - Age of Empires III dog names list (In Japanese)
- ^ http://www.wbspenguins.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=33&Itemid=39
- ^ * http://davehall.com.au/blog/dave/2007/08/02/tux-cake
- ^ http://davehall.com.au/blog/dave/2007/08/02/tux-cake#comment-216
- ^ The first Linux monument in history unveiled in Russia at lazarenko.me
- ^ The website of TuxGuitar
- ^ Linus' git commit from Rusty Russell
- ^ LWN.net: The kernel gets a new logo
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tuz-logo.svg
- ^ http://www.itwire.com/opinion-and-analysis/open-sauce/22491-one-bush-who-has-designs-on-lca2009?start=1
- ^ file Documentation/logo.txt from Linux kernel source code
This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Tux (mascot)", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL.
External links
- Article discussing the creation of Tux
- Linux 2.0 Penguins (Larry Ewing)
- A complete history of Tux
- Wired News story on Tux
- The Gospel of Tux
- The LWN Penguin Gallery
- GPL'd sewing patterns for Tux
- Roblimo's video posting explaining the use of Tux in the DCI Group video
- How to make a paper tux penguin
- Tux Droid : A real open source Tux
- TuxMathScrabble and TuxWordSmith Education Games
- The Free Penguin Project - GPL'd machine embroidery design files for Tux.