Pod Flopping | Office Hours 31
We share some recent adventures, and the tale of how water got dumped into Chris' new home server.
We share some recent adventures, and the tale of how water got dumped into Chris' new home server.
We open the robe and spend a little time chatting about the software development business.
Is Ham Radio a natural hobby for Linux users? An old friend joins us to explain where the two overlap. Special Guest: Noah Chelliah.
We dive into Lemmy, a self-hosted Reddit alternative. Plus, a couple of easy-to-deploy tools that make life better.
What we really like in Debian 12, the big players backing RISC-V, and the improvements in NextCloud Hub 5.
We chew on the ridiculous situation Reddit has created for itself and the weak position of app developers.
We get the inside scoop on SouthEast LinuxFest, and share a few stories from the early days of the Linux community. Special Guest: Noah Chelliah.
Ubuntu gets serious about the immutable desktop, red flags from Red Hat, and the little tricks Apple used to patch Wine.
We argue over what sucked the most at WWDC this year and then surprise each other with two things that thrill us.
We attempt to swap Linux distributions live on our production server, to prove that new tooling makes the Linux distro model obsolete.
We chat with 45Drives about their ambitions to build a home-lab server that bridges the gap between enterprise-level servers and consumer-grade NAS products. And more.
How the recent XFS bug was squashed, insights into why Microsoft built their own Linux from scratch, and recent attacks on Archive.org.
We chew on the best bits from this year's Microsoft Build and the bright red flag coming from the Rust community.
We take a "Rust-only tools" challenge for a week and admit what worked, and what sucked. Plus, a surprise guest.
We travel 10 years into the future and report back on how podcasts and Jupiter Broadcasting are doing after all those years.
Microsoft's new Linux server distro, Red Hat Summit 2023 highlights, big changes at CodeWeavers, and Podman catches up to Docker Desktop.
OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman has gone straight for the open-source kill move.
How we found peace with the Linux community’s perpetual debates; and our tricks for finding the signal from the noise.
Alex tempts Chris with his Obsidian ways, our thoughts on Drobo going bankrupt, and Photoprism adding paid tiers. Plus, the slick suite of tools you'll want to run on your LAN.
Bcachefs hits a major milestone, how the Red Hat cuts impact Fedora, Plasma 6 plans, and the software update bricking EV batteries.
We laugh at Google's scramble, check in on the Twitter collapse, and how one developer's little mistake screwed millions.
The push for free software takes years, maybe even generations. Brent gets the inside story from the Free Software Foundation Europe. Special Guest: Matthias Kirschner.
We look back at some classic JB shows and chat about why they ended.
We get you up to speed on two serious flaws, Linux's recent gaming loss, Ubuntu doubling down on RISC-V, and news from the Open Source Summit North America.
A scathing takedown of Serverless... By Amazon? We react to this strange revelation and more.
The first new desktop environment in a while that has caught our attention, and it promises to unlock the full power of cutting-edge Linux.
Why Chris needs ANOTHER Home Assistant instance and a major breakthrough for self-hosters. Special Guest: Brent Gervais.
The results from the recent HDR Hackfest, Mozilla's new acquisition, and the concerning crack down on free software encryption.
Why open source might be the real AI winner long-term, and Mike gets the ultimate "I told you so."
Two listeners race to set up a web server on Suicide Linux. One slip-up and it's all gone. Who will survive?