Rethinking GNOME | LINUX Unplugged 521
Two important news stories, plus our thoughts on GNOME’s new windowing proposal and the Framework 16.
Two important news stories, plus our thoughts on GNOME’s new windowing proposal and the Framework 16.
Alex shares a suite of self-hosted apps that replace Reddit. Chris is struggling with Jellyfin, and we discuss where NixOS is killing it and where we think it falls down.
Elon Musk trying to build the "everything app" is ridiculous, and the quiet little promise openAI just made with the White House.
Do they build them better in Germany? We try out the next-generation InfinityBook Pro 14 and dig into TUXEDO OS.
Why independent media is getting just as bad as mainstream media, and Brent's escape from a wildfire.
Shopify has a mind-blowingly obvious solution to too many meetings, a recent failure Chris is struggling with, and more.
Have Oracle and SUSE lost their minds? Plus, we dig into Fedora's proposal to add telemetry collection to Workstation.
The advantages of Federating a local and remote Nextcloud, Chris replaces Google Home Hub's photo powers and the new docker-compose feature that will change Alex's entire setup. Special Guest: Brent Gervais.
openAI's window to build their moat is closing, but they have a powerful friend stepping up to help seal the deal. Plus, our reaction to Oracle's very spicy response to Red Hat.
Can Ubuntu make a great immutable desktop? We're trying the brand-new "Everything is a Snap" Ubuntu Core Desktop.
We've got a radically new format idea for Office Hours and want to tell you all about it.
Recent advances in embedded Linux, Canonical takes full control of LXD, ZFS gets a handy Btrfs feature, and updates on the show's production.
Mike updates us on his development adventures in Unreal 5, signs the Vision Pro might be a flop, and answer questions about abandoning Red Hat's platform.
Just about every take on the Red Hat news seems to have missed the mark. Special Guest: Carl George.
We cover our must-have self-hosted apps, reflect on the state of Self-Hosting now, and discuss what's new in Proxmox 8.
Why everyone is excited about the next Linux kernel, Valve's big hire, and Red Hat's clone war.
Why everyone is excited about the next Linux kernel, Valve's big hire, and Red Hat's clone war.
We got our eyes on the Vision Pro SDK and share our new insights. And why the claims of stalled Mastodon adoption might ring a bit true.
Chris tears into two old PCs, and builds a surprisingly powerful multi-monitor Wayland workstation.
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.