Steve Langasek, one of Ubuntu Linux's leading lights, has died

thenewstack.io

302 points

CrankyBear

2 days ago


27 comments

unethical_ban 2 days ago

Wow. RIP. It is a name I hadn't thought of in years. I was on Ubuntu Forums and some other Ubuntu communities as an observer/power user, and I recall him being a source of knowledge and education. "slangesek".

45, so young. Thanks for being there for all of us re: Ubuntu!

davidw 2 days ago

Sad news. He did a lot for Debian and Ubuntu.

lukeh 21 hours ago

Sad news. His name is familiar from the LDAP days.

tartoran 2 days ago

RIP Steve Langasek and thank you for your contributions to Ubuntu.

kopirgan 2 days ago

So young.. It's sad

cute_boi 2 days ago

45 years :(

The article says illness, but which illness?

  • vanc_cefepime 2 days ago

    Could be anything, sadly. Tteck, from Proxmox helper scripts recently died as well but did inform the GitHub community it was appendiceal cancer. Sadly he went quite quick too.

    I had a medical colleague who unexpectedly died at 33 after Christmas.

    Life is short. Hug your loved ones and let them know you love them everyday.

    • zblevins 2 days ago

      Reading this while holding my new born and man does this hit you right in the gut.

      • tartoran 2 days ago
        3 more

        I feel it too. My kid is 6 and my most important goal right now is survive and be able to provide until he becomes a young adult. My father died right when I was 20 year old and while it was hard I managed. I can't image how hard it would've been growing up without a dad. And without a mom is probably even worse but I let moms worry about that.

        • maeil 2 days ago
          2 more

          Staying alive isn't enough - plenty of kids with dads (or moms) who are alive but still grow up without them.

          • tartoran a day ago

            Absolutely, staying alive but not being part of the child's life is not much different than being dead from their point of view. In my case I have a very good connection with my kid and spend a lot of time together, my kid gets priority over a lot of other things such as personal goals...

      • giancarlostoro 2 days ago
        2 more

        As they get older it hits harder, just the thought of any harm.

        • zblevins 2 days ago

          Yea, I find myself growing increasingly sensitive. I spent several years in Afghanistan and now the most mildest of violence even in media bothers me. I couldn’t imagine either of my sons having to go through that or anyone else’s children. Life is so incredibly precious and until proven otherwise rare.

      • danieldk 2 days ago

        Yeah. This really changed for me after getting a kid. The thought I hope to live long enough to see my kid do X crosses my mind on a regular basis. Makes you enjoy all of it much more, especially because a lot of things that I can see her do now, I wished to see ~10 years ago.

      • IncreasePosts 2 days ago
        2 more

        [flagged]

        • zblevins 2 days ago

          Sheesh man that’s pretty damn dark.

  • dezgeg 2 days ago

    According to his Mastodon, stage 4 colon cancer

    • mmasu 2 days ago

      do your colonoscopies early. It’s not a fun thing to do, but it can save your life

      • ANewFormation 2 days ago

        The statistics on early detection are very different than most think. Colonoscopies were one of the only tests with a statistically significant positive outcome, but even that has been challenged recently by multiple studies. [1]

        I don't know the exact cause colonoscopies are not performing as thought, but for breast cancer it's quite interesting - basically treatment was improving at the exact same time early screening was being heavily promoted. And so years of survival continued to increase in a strongly proportional way to early screenings.

        Naturally people assumed the correlation was causal, but it turns out screening mammograms are only marginally effective and that women are significantly more likely to receive unnecessary treatment (treating small tumors that would not have developed into large malignant tumors) than to receive beneficial treatment. [2]

        If screening provides someone with piece of mind, then more power to them, but you're unlikely to meaningfully extend your life.

        [1] https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03228-z

        [2] - https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1600249

      • officeplant 2 days ago
        2 more

        It sucks that you have to basically choke the money out of insurance to get them done prior to age 45. I found polyps by paying thousands out of pocket when insurance told me 36 was too young and there wasn't enough blood in my stool. That's with a mother having them removed at 19, and older brother having them removed at 39.

        • bluGill 2 days ago

          Given your family history they should have been done young. However they are not completely risk free and so for most of us the standard guideline of 50 is good enough.

          There are less invasive tests that can be done instead as well. They are not as likely to find cancer (which is why you should have done the more invasive colonoscopy), and if they do find anything you have to do a colonoscopy anyway, so for those with less family history who have unexplained bleeding while young they are a good option. Ask your doctor about the pros and cons of them if this comes up. (I suspect once you reach 50 a colonoscopy every 10 years is the right answer)

      • TacticalCoder a day ago

        > do your colonoscopies early. It’s not a fun thing to do, but it can save your life

        It's actually not that bad. I did it six months ago (at 51 y/o, never having done any before that), after reading an identical comment on HN saying to just go and do it.

        I don't know about other countries but I could choose between no anesthesia at all, light one or full anesthesia. I went for the light one: you don't really fall asleep but you don't really remember either the silly things you say. After a few minutes (15 at most?) you're fully conscious again.

        Zero polyps to remove and all crystal clear, doctor told me to come back for a checkup in 5 or 6 years.

        So I confirm: just go and do it.

  • bragr 2 days ago

    Neither any of the articles I looked up nor his obituaries name the illness so I assume he wanted that kept private. Probably not how I'd handle it, but to each their own.

    • bluGill 2 days ago

      Depends. AIDS (this is treatable these days, but I'm using it as an example) would imply a history of something he would want to keep secret from his conservative church. Of course I have no idea what his religion is, nor what he died of. If it is cancer - while rare at his age it happens and isn't something I'd be embarrassed of but maybe he was.

      To some extent too, you don't get to chose this, those who write your obituary do. Perhaps his wife (I have no idea if he was marred) and him have a disagreement on what is embarrassing and so even though he would have shared this she wanted it secret.

      • fred_is_fred 2 days ago
        2 more

        This is some awful speculation. You speculate that he had AIDS and was embarrassed by his church or that his wife was embarrassed. You don't know if he was religious, you don't know if he was married, and you certainly don't know if he had AIDS. Why even comment?

        • bluGill 18 hours ago

          Speculation has a specific definition which does not apply (I checked several online dictionaries). I was offering examples of things, but not considering them and therefore was not speculating.