Bugfix and Chill | LINUX Unplugged 449
How each of us asks for features and help from free software projects, and one of our most prescient soapboxes in a while.
How each of us asks for features and help from free software projects, and one of our most prescient soapboxes in a while.
We look back at our favorite moments from the last ten years of the Raspberry Pi, why you might want to start considering one, and where we want to see the platform evolve.
Why Dirty Pipe is a dirty dog, the explosive adoption of Linux at AMD, and an important update on elementary OS.
We revisit one of the core theses of the show and expand on it in a new way, leading us to ponder just what a wild ride the next eight years are going to be.
We surprise each other with three different topics, hidden away by encryption in our show notes - we literally have no idea what we're talking about this week.
Why it might be time to lower your RISC-V expectations, Intel's moves to close up CPU firmware, and a quick state of the Deck.
Mike and Chris eat some crow as they change their tune on a recent spicy take.
We look at two new options that enable ANYONE to run a personal server at home or a small business.
Alex gives the new TrueNAS SCALE a go and hits a snag.
The Linux secret behind the new TrueNAS release, Intel acquires a major Kernel contributor and our thoughts on Podman 4.0.
Mike has some huge news and busted wifi, Chris spent a weekend in the Metaverse, and why Microsoft has us both upset.
We put the sports car of Linux laptops to the test. Is it the multi-tasking machine it claims to be?
Canonical has a big week, why bcachefs looks like it's taking another step forward, and ChromeOS Flex for PCs is released.
After reminiscing about .Net's 20th birthday, Mike and Chris air IBM's hypocritically dirty laundry and marvel at Microsoft's 3D chess moves.
Linux is the master of small computers, and this week it’s going to the next level. We chat with the creator of the $15 Linux box and share some significant updates for the Raspberry Pi. Special Guest: Brian Benchoff.
Sometimes we get a bit carried away; we dial it back and share some self-hosting long-timer insights.
A last-minute kernel patch for the Steam Deck, why Intel is supporting RISC-V development, and we go hands-on with Plasma 5.24.
Mike makes a shocking admission, and Chris wishes he had a time machine.
There's just something off about Ubuntu these days, this week we put it all together.
System76 reveals a new tool to make Pop's desktop faster than the rest, and we break down that recent Btrfs defrag infinite loop bug.
Microsoft's cold war with Apple is revealed in court filings this week, and Google thinks they've got the next hit on their hands, which sounds a lot like the old hit.
Brent's in the hot seat and plays to win 1000 Satoshis, while Wes adds a little color commentary.
We all take it for granted, but it is one of the best things about Linux. We share the history of the live CD, how it all got started, and the times it saved our bacon.
Alex has a new high-quality self-hosted music setup, and Chris solves complicated Internet problems.
The big disruption that looks like a bust, a security issue you need to pay attention to, and some great news for the Steam Deck.
The audience hits us in the face with some hard truths, and then we dig into Microsoft's fox-like moves to snatch up Activision Blizzard on "the cheap."
SUSE had an awkward week; we breakdown the very mixed launch of SUSE Liberty Linux.
We explain SUSE Liberty Linux and contemplate why the community seems to be selecting distributions with newer kernels.
Emboldened by his success, Mike takes a victory lap. Little does he know it's all virtual.
We react to Microsoft gobbling up yet another game studio, chat about Crypto.com's recent $15M hack, the massive failure YouTube just admitted, and a few personal crew stories.