Planet Incinerating Technology | LINUX Unplugged 441
We make some last-minute changes to our server setup and catch up on a bunch of thought-provoking feedback. Special Guests: Martin Wimpress and Neal Gompa.
We make some last-minute changes to our server setup and catch up on a bunch of thought-provoking feedback. Special Guests: Martin Wimpress and Neal Gompa.
Alex got some new devices for Christmas, and we set off to figure out how to integrate them into his network.
Our road trip machine is loaded up from solar to networking, the tech that made working, living, and recording from the road possible for 44 days and over 2,200 miles.
Fedora and Red Hat users are getting a web-based installer, and a new legal situation for Bitcoin smells like retro SCO FUD.
Was he justified? Our thoughts on the dev who corrupted libraries in NPM for millions of users with his political statement about free software.
During our summer road trip to Denver we had the microphone's recording and captured some great moments.
A new initiative uses open source to keep podcasting decentralized and add new features.
GnuPG has some great news, Libadwaita 1.0 has arrived and we share our thoughts, plus a big batch of updates from the Matrix project.
Mike has a significant moment of clarity and sets out on a new path for 2022. Meanwhile, Chris is just happy to be out of the woods.
It's a casual community hangout, and we spin the Wheel of Topics. From what Linux does worst, our thoughts on EndlessOS, Ubuntu Web Remix, QubesOS, Brent's adventures with JellyFin, and why Linux will ultimately dominate all operating systems in 20 years.
Our new server setup is bonkers, but we love it.
Some old friends of JB join Alex to discuss 3D printing. Special Guests: chzbacon and Drew DeVore.
Mike finds a new normal and doubles down on what works. Chris meanwhile is stranded in the woods and is having a bit of a panic.
We do our best to predict what will happen in 2022, and own up to what we thought might happen in 2021. Special Guests: Alan Pope, Drew DeVore, and Joe Ressington.
We kick off our annual predictions episode with what we got right and wrong this year and then attempt to predict what will happen in 2022.
We're both impressed by Rails 7 and how an old foe got us down again.
It's the second annual Unplugged Tuxies; our community votes on the best projects, distros, desktops, and services of 2021.
Big internal process improvements have resulted in a major new version of elementary OS hot on the heals of the previous release. Find out why 6.1 is a lot more than just a number. Special Guest: Danielle Foré .
The nasty Log4Shell vulnerability isn't solved yet, this week saw a new round of attacks and patches.
Recent AWS outages sent Alex on a hunt to find more self-hosted alternatives, and Chris digs into the latest Home Assistant release.
The broader software problem the Log4Shell vulnerability reveals, and the story of how Chris lit his Coder robe on fire... While wearing it.
We each try out the new Pop_OS! and Carl Richell from System76 joins us to get into the details.
The Log4Shell vulnerability is making waves this week; we'll explain why and break down how it works.
We peak in on one of the nastiest corporate moves in a while, and Chris has a big confession.
This was not the year of the Linux Desktop. We’ve been slacking on the mailbag, so we go on a feedback frenzy and answer some hard questions about desktop Linux. Special Guests: Carl George and Martin Wimpress.
Taken from Monday's Coder live stream, Chris reacts to discovering that the city of Miami has its own crypto coin. As the conversation goes on it turns into a broader discussion about how cryptocurrency gets a bad reputation, and why that reputation is completely divorced from the reality of the technology.
Industry-changing open-source project releases, and why the new CentOS Stream 9 might be more noteworthy than you realize. Special Guest: Carl George.
We try out a couple of very popular Docker GUI's and report back, and discuss our biggest Self-Hosted regrets.
Mike visits Pallet Town and comes back with some SQLAlchemy performance wisdom to share. Meanwhile, struggling with a lack of performance, Chris has kicked the tires of his new M1 Max MacBook Pro and is ready to share his counter-narrative take on the new hardware.
The Director of EndlessOS joins us to respond to recent Flatpak criticism.