Linux Action News 268
The contested subsystem coming soon, a sobering assessment of wireless support in Linux, and a triumph for free software.
The contested subsystem coming soon, a sobering assessment of wireless support in Linux, and a triumph for free software.
We will discuss the practical implementations of AI embedded in future products, then take a look at FTX's books and have a few highlights to share.
We dig into Shufflecake, a tool that lets Linux users hide data with plausible deniability, then let our live stream SSH into our server and see if they can discover our secret data.
We're chatting about workstation builds for a home NAS with Joe Ressington this week. Chris chews on the news of the Evernote buyout and his challenges with Zigbee. Special Guest: Joe Resington.
We tried Fedora 37 on the Pi 4, the Google surprise this week, and our thoughts on the WSL 1.0 release.
We tried Fedora 37 on the Pi 4, the Google surprise this week, and our thoughts on the WSL 1.0 release.
Microsoft lets its geek flag fly, our observations on .NET 7, and the recent upset caused by the Troll Wizard, but we can't understand who will pay the toll.
Why this latest release of Fedora misses the mark, and Ubuntu's quiet backing away from ZFS.
Why LBRY was never going to win, and how they have just screwed all crypto. And a new feature in the works for our listeners by our listeners.
Microsoft's new goodies for Linux users, the Ubuntu Summit wraps up, and our takeaways from the recent fireside chat with Linus Torvalds.
Mike just came up for air after a Swift deep dive, and he has a fresh new take. Plus, the wheels of history are spinning faster; we take a snapshot in time and then round it all out with spicy Apple bacon.
We surprise each other with three different topics, and Chris has a big update on the ODROID H3+.
Sometimes your best upgrades are unplanned; Chris just got his Home Assistant Yellow fully deployed.
What you need to know about that new OpenSSL vulnerability, the big bcachefs update we've been waiting for, and why the community is creating a Gitea fork.
We slip into full boss mode after digging into some long-term tech trends impacting developers.
Are the long-timers holding Linux back? Lennart Poettering argues we are and proposes a new Microsoft-blessed way to secure Linux.
We recap a busy night after a studio power outage, then dig into what makes an open-source project worth contributing to. Why do some fail while others grow and prosper?
The focus of the new Ubuntu release, Gitea's surprising announcement, and Linux prepares to drop another architecture.
One of the most challenging aspects of being an independent developer, and our thoughts on Microsoft's recent bad news.
The Internet is going crazy with AI-generated media. What's the open-source story, and is Linux being left out?
Alex gives Roon Labs whole home audio a try but discovers a critical design flaw while Chris checks out his new ODROID-H3+ and plans his next epic build.
What makes Google's new OS so secure, a critical WiFi vulnerability in the Kernel, and why Linus is tapping the hype breaks for Linux 6.1.
We debate if GitHub's Copilot enables automated code laundering after a developer makes a startling discovery. Then we dispense some seriously old-school wisdom.
Linus Tech Tips blows it again, and we clean up. Plus, we push System76's updated Thelio Workstation to the breaking point.
It was one technical disaster after another, we recap the series of technical challenges that killed all future shows from the road.
Plasma 5.26's standout features, Canonical flips the script on Red Hat, and why Android is leaking traffic outside VPNs.
Elon Musk's leaked messages reveal how tech CEOs think and talk about their employees, and we dig in.
What the heck is going on? Fedora is dropping features, GNOME is getting Iced, and the mistake we'll never make again. We've got a lot to sort out.
Chris Raspberry Pi server is dead, and Alex has a few ideas for his next build. Special Guest: Brent Gervais.
Our thoughts on IBM slicing up more of Red Hat, what stands out in Nextcloud Hub 3, and a few essential fixes finally landing in the Linux kernel.