Blame the Automation | Coder Radio 534
Azure suffers a big outage, and Microsoft blames faulty automation; why we think there might be early signs of weak demand for Apple's Vision Pro and more.
Azure suffers a big outage, and Microsoft blames faulty automation; why we think there might be early signs of weak demand for Apple's Vision Pro and more.
While chaos is brewing in SUSE and Red Hat land, Canonical stays the course and doubles down on the Linux desktop. Plus, our thoughts on the kernel team GPL-blocking NVIDIA.
U.S. officials are warning open-source software could be a cyber security threat. Their solution? Money. But do we want them picking the winners and losers of open source?
We daily drive Asahi Linux on a MacBook, chat about how the team beat Apple to a major GPU milestone, and an easy way to self-host open-source ChatGPT alternatives. Special Guest: Neal Gompa.
Behind-the-scenes details of a new show in the works, our thoughts on a new genre of Podcasts bursting onto the scene, and we make JB history live on the show.
Alex does a significant overhaul of his website and shares new insights. Chris finally archives complete local voice control of his network, we complain about the state of domain name sellers, and more.
Mike hits the limits of ChatGPT's knowledge, a chat about editors and what we'd do for a living if it had to be outside of tech.
Can we build an indestructible server that stands up to the test of giving out root login to the Internet?
Chris and Brent are running with scissors and breaking things again. From the website to YouTube, how we broke just about everything this week.
Java developers are getting the Oracle shakedown, openAI is running out of money, and more.
We're trying out Rhino Linux—a unique take on rolling Ubuntu with AUR-like powers and other surprises.
A few tools to build your own Way Back Machine, we check in with the "Year of Voice" and more.
Did we get this one wrong? It seems consumer AI is eating the lunch of some web's biggest names.
Why Linux reigns for privacy; our recommendations for secure tools from chat to DNS.
A quick Pocket Office from "the field" on the new tech inbound to Office Hours and a big update on our bounty for episode 34!
Microsoft's dirty old API games, the new, even more restrictive rules Apple developers will now have to follow, and why Google's "Web Integrity API" seems gross.
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.