The New Screen Savers 40: Gravitational Waves Discovered - podcast episode cover

The New Screen Savers 40: Gravitational Waves Discovered

Feb 13, 20161 hr 25 min
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Episode description

Gravitational waves with a physicist on the LIGO project, we begin our build of the Ultimate VR Gaming Machine with Ryan Shrout, Leo and Ron get their ears 3D scanned, and Moldover the godfather of controllerism shows off his effects for voice and guitar.

Sparkle check in Terminal:
find /Applications -path '*Autoupdate.app/Contents/Info.plist' -exec echo {} \; -exec grep -A1 CFBundleShortVersionString '{}' \; | grep -v CFBundleShortVersionString

Hosts: Leo Laporte and Ron Richards

Guests: Alan Weinstein, Sam Kellett, Karol Hatzilias, Megan Morrone, Ryan Shrout, and Matt Moldover

Producers: Jerry Wagley, Karsten Bondy, and Tonya Hall

Technical Director: Anthony Nielsen

Editor: Anthony Nielsen

The New Screen Savers is available for download at https://twit.tv/shows/new-screen-savers.

Thanks to CacheFly for bandwidth for this episode.

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Transcript

Find Out What Mac Apps are Affected Sparkle Vulnerability Primary Navigation Podcasts Club Blog Subscribe Sponsors More… Tech Find Out What Mac Apps are Affected Sparkle Vulnerability

Feb 16th 2016

Megan Morrone has a very important security tip for all Mac users. There is vulnerability in Mac OS X called Sparkle, which comes from the open source software by the same name that many developers use to facilitate updates on their Mac apps. Affected apps include VLC Media Player, Utorrent, Duet Display, and Sketch. The flaw comes from using a vulnerable version of Sparkle combined with an unencryped HTTP channel.

To find out which apps use Sparkle on your system and the version they are using, open the Terminal, then cut and paste this command into the window:

find /Applications -path '*Autoupdate.app/Contents/Info.plist' -exec echo {} \; -exec grep -A1 CFBundleShortVersionString '{}' \; | grep -v CFBundleShortVersionString

Once you find out which apps are vulnerable, you can uninstall them. If you have a vulnerable app that you don't want to uninstall, it's a good idea to avoid using public Wi-Fi spots.

Share: Copied! The New Screen Savers #40
Feb 13 2016 - Gravitational Waves Discovered
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