All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Jupiter Broadcasting
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Nov 28, 2019 • 0sec

Machine Learning Magic | TechSNAP 417

We explore the rapid adoption of machine learning, its impact on computer architecture, and how to avoid AI snake oil. Plus so-so SSD security, and a new wireless protocol that works best where the Wi-Fi sucks.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.“Where the Wi-Fi sucks” is where a new wireless protocol does its magic Ubiquiti’s new “Amplifi Alien” is a mesh-capable Wi-Fi 6 router Self-encrypting deception: weaknesses in the encryption of solid state drives Securely erase a solid-state drive https://www.thomas-krenn.com/en/wiki/SSDSecureErase https://grok.lsu.edu/Article.aspx?articleid=16716 Solid state drive/Memory cell clearing - ArchWiki The Deep Learning Revolution and Its Implications for Computer Architecture and Chip Design Intel Core i9-10980XE—a step forward for AI, a step back for everything else How to recognize AI snake oil
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Nov 28, 2019 • 0sec

Certified BSD | BSD Now 326

LPI releases BSD Certification, openzfs trip report, Using FreeBSD with ports, LLDB threading support ready, Linux versus Open Source Unix, and more. Headlines Linux Professional Institute Releases BSD Specialist Certification - re BSD Certification Group Linux Professional Institute extends its Open Technology certification track with the BSD Specialist Certification. Starting October 30, 2019, BSD Specialist exams will be globally available. The certification was developed in collaboration with the BSD Certification Group which merged with Linux Professional Institute in 2018. G. Matthew Rice, the Executive Director of Linux Professional Institute says that "the release of the BSD Specialist certification marks a major milestone for Linux Professional Institute. With this new credential, we are reaffirming our belief in the value of, and support for, all open source technologies. As much as possible, future credentials and educational programs will include coverage of BSD.” OpenZFS Trip Report The seventh annual OpenZFS Developer Summit took place on November 4th and 5th in San Francisco and brought together a healthy mix of familiar faces and new community participants. Several folks from iXsystems took part in the talks, hacking, and socializing at this amazing annual event. The messages of the event can be summed up as Unification, Refinement, and Ecosystem Tooling. News Roundup Using FreeBSD with Ports (2/2): Tool-assisted updating Part 1 here: https://eerielinux.wordpress.com/2019/08/18/using-freebsd-with-ports-1-2-classic-way-with-tools/ In the previous post I explained why sometimes building your software from ports may make sense on FreeBSD. I also introduced the reader to the old-fashioned way of using tools to make working with ports a bit more convenient. In this follow-up post we’re going to take a closer look at portmaster and see how it especially makes updating from ports much, much easier. For people coming here without having read the previous article: What I describe here is not what every FreeBSD admin today should consider good practice (any more)! It can still be useful in special cases, but my main intention is to discuss this for building up the foundation for what you actually should do today. LLDB Threading support now ready for mainline Upstream describes LLDB as a next generation, high-performance debugger. It is built on top of LLVM/Clang toolchain, and features great integration with it. At the moment, it primarily supports debugging C, C++ and ObjC code, and there is interest in extending it to more languages. In February, I have started working on LLDB, as contracted by the NetBSD Foundation. So far I've been working on reenabling continuous integration, squashing bugs, improving NetBSD core file support, extending NetBSD's ptrace interface to cover more register types and fix compat32 issues and fixing watchpoint support. Then, I've started working on improving thread support which is taking longer than expected. You can read more about that in my September 2019 report. So far the number of issues uncovered while enabling proper threading support has stopped me from merging the work-in-progress patches. However, I've finally reached the point where I believe that the current work can be merged and the remaining problems can be resolved afterwards. More on that and other LLVM-related events happening during the last month in this report. Linux VS open source UNIX Beastie Bits Support for Realtek RTL8125 2.5Gb Ethernet controller Computer Files Are Going Extinct FreeBSD kernel hacking Modern BSD Computing for Fun on a VAX! Trying to use a VAX in today's world by Jeff Armstrong MidnightBSD 1.2 Released Feedback/Questions Paulo - Zfs snapshots Phillip - GCP A Listener - Old episodes? Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv Your browser does not support the HTML5 video tag. Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.
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Nov 27, 2019 • 0sec

Void Linux + Contributing to Open Source | Choose Linux 23

A chance to learn some Linux fundamentals in Distrohoppers, and the numerous ways we can all contribute to Linux and open source.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Void Linux — Void is a general purpose operating system, based on the monolithic Linux® kernel.Mozilla bug report writing guidelines — This page assumes you'd like to contribute to the Mozilla project by collecting enough information to enter a useful bug report in Bugzilla, the Mozilla bug tracking system.Reporting bugs in Ubuntu — A quick introduction to reporting bugs in Ubuntu. This is just a very brief rough guide. Not final.#100DaysOfCode — The Official Website for the Challenge Write the Docs — Write the Docs is a global community of people who care about documentation.Operation Safe Escape — Ell and Wes talk to Chris Cox, the executive director of Operation Safe Escape about battling stalking and technology-based abuse.
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Nov 26, 2019 • 0sec

Flat Network Truthers | LINUX Unplugged 329

Build one flat network across cloud providers, personal networks, with even thousands of nodes. We feature two amazing open source solutions, and the creators behind them. Plus community news, first impressons of Google Stadia, listener feedback, and some great picks.Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar, Guus Sliepen, and Ryan Huber.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Chris Fisher on Twitter: “Trying out @GoogleStadia before today’s @LinuxUnplugged. Google is Working to Bring Mainline Linux Kernel to Android Linux 5.5 Crypto Code Has The Changes To Usher In WireGuard - Phoronix System76 Superfan 3 Article Photo Gallery for System76 Superfan 3 Pinebook Pro Article Jupiter Extras: popey on ThinkPads Jupiter Extras - NOW ON YouTube Tinc VPN Tinc - ArchWiki Install tinc VPN for Linux using the Snap Store | Snapcraft Introducing Nebula, the open source global overlay network from Slack Slack’s open source Nebula overlay network tool can solve multi region connectivity woes - TechRepublic Nebula on GitHub Feedback: CLI Autocomplete? fzf: A command-line fuzzy finder Fish Shell Liam writes… Hi Chris, I have also been experiencing random lag… Profile-sync-daemon: Symlinks and syncs browser profile dirs to RAM thus reducing HDD/SDD calls and speeding-up browsers. Feedback: Forum? wee-slack: A WeeChat plugin for Slack.com. Supports threads and reactions, synchronizes read markers, provides typing notification, etc.. Girens for Plex - Linux Apps on Flathub
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Nov 26, 2019 • 0sec

Brunch with Brent: Jacob Roecker | Jupiter Extras 35

Brent sits down with Jacob Roecker, long-time Jupiter Broadcasting community member and Bronze Star Medal decorated United States Army veteran. Jacob shares his journey from deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan through to dealing with PTSD, and how Jupiter Broadcasting and it's community was integral throughout.Special Guest: Jacob Roecker.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training for $299. Limited time Black Friday offer. Only from Linux Academy.Brunch with Brent: Allan JudeLinux Action Show (LAS) - ArchiveThe Computer Chronicles ArchiveJupiter@Nite - ArchiveSciByte - ArchiveSystem76 Desktops - MeerkatPosttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) - WikipediaUbuntu MATEMartin Wimpress (Wimpy) - @mwimpress on TwitterMicrosoft Bob - WikipediaPlex Media ServerTechSNAPCoderRadioChris Fisher - @ChrisLAS on TwitterAngela - @Angerz on TwitterThe J. R. Simplot CompanyLinux AcademyJupiter ExtrasUbuntu PodcastEll - @Ello_Punk on TwitterTheory of Constraints - WikipediaUser ErrorJacob Roecker - @parkingthought on TwitterJacob's Blog: ParkingThought - Curiosity, Meet GratitudeBrent Gervais - @brentgervais on Twitter
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Nov 24, 2019 • 0sec

Linux Action News 133

Google, Mozilla, and GitLab make serious upgrades to their bug bounty programs, insights into Debian's renewed systemd debate, and how Microsoft and IBM are working together to fight patent trolls. Plus our thoughts on LVFS for Chromebooks, and the recent Monero hack.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Updates to the Mozilla Web Security Bounty Program — To celebrate the 15 years of the 1.0 release of Firefox, we are making significant enhancements to the web bug bounty program.GitLab: We are increasing bounties in our bug bounty program — Since we opened our bug bounty program to the public in December 2018, our community of external security researchers submitted 1,282 reports and we paid out $515,899 in bounties.Expanding the Android Security Rewards ProgramGoogle will pay $1.5 million for the most severe Android exploitsGoogle and fwupd sitting in a treeGoogle To Require "Designed For Chromebook" Devices Support Fwupd Firmware UpdatesDebian init systems - what, another GR ? — Sam Hartman, the Debian Project Leader, has proposed a General Resolution (a plebiscite of the whole project) about init systems. In this posting I am going to try to summarise the situation. This will necessarily be a personal view but I will try to be fair. Also, sorry that it's so long but there is a lot of ground to cover.General Resolution: Init systems and systemdOpen Invention Network Teams with IBM, Linux Foundation and Microsoft to Further Protect Open Source from Patent Trolls — Open Invention Network announced today it is partnering with IBM, the Linux Foundation and Microsoft to further protect open source software (OSS) from Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) leveraging low quality patents, also called patent trolls.IBM, Microsoft and Linux Foundation link arms to fight patent trolls with 'multimillion' schemeOfficial Monero website is hacked to deliver currency-stealing malware — GetMonero.org delivers Linux and Windows binaries that steal users' funds.
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Nov 22, 2019 • 0sec

Popey on Thinkpads | Jupiter Extras 34

Chz sits down with Alan Pope (Popey) to discuss his thoughts about Thinkpads, and why they might be the perfect Linux laptop. Find out what those model numbers really mean, plus our tips for picking which one is right for you.Special Guest: Alan Pope.Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.ThinkWikiThinkpad Hardware Maintenance ManualsThinkPad Subreddit
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Nov 21, 2019 • 0sec

Is Vegan TV Art? | User Error 79

Disposing of hard drives, what a TV really is, and the veganism of software. Plus the serious business of coffee, why modern music sucks, and making Popey feel bad. 00:00:48 With better technology, why don’t we necessarily see better art? 00:09:03 Is Linux (or FOSS) the vegan option within software? 00:13:43 Do you own a TV? 00:20:24 How do you prepare your coffee? 00:25:05 How do you forgive yourself? 00:32:19 How do you dispose of your old hard drives for security purposes?Sponsored By:Linux Academy: Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.Links:Linux Academy Black Friday Sale — Give yourself a year of opportunity and save $150. Get a full year of Hands-On Cloud Training. Limited time Black Friday Offer.
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Nov 21, 2019 • 0sec

Cracking Rainbows | BSD Now 325

FreeBSD 12.1 is here, A history of Unix before Berkeley, FreeBSD development setup, HardenedBSD 2019 Status Report, DNSSEC, compiling RainbowCrack on OpenBSD, and more. Headlines FreeBSD 12.1 Some of the highlights: BearSSL has been imported to the base system. The clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt utilities and libc++ have been updated to version 8.0.1. OpenSSL has been updated to version 1.1.1d. Several userland utility updates. For a complete list of new features and known problems, please see the online release notes and errata list, available at: https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/12.1R/relnotes.html A History of UNIX before Berkeley: UNIX Evolution: 1975-1984. Nobody needs to be told that UNIX is popular today. In this article we will show you a little of where it was yesterday and over the past decade. And, without meaning in the least to minimise the incredible contributions of Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie, we will bring to light many of the others who worked on early versions, and try to show where some of the key ideas came from, and how they got into the UNIX of today. Our title says we are talking about UNIX evolution. Evolution means different things to different people. We use the term loosely, to describe the change over time among the many different UNIX variants in use both inside and outside Bell Labs. Ideas, code, and useful programs seem to have made their way back and forth - like mutant genes - among all the many UNIXes living in the phone company over the decade in question. Part One looks at some of the major components of the current UNIX system - the text formatting tools, the compilers and program development tools, and so on. Most of the work described in Part One took place at Research'', a part of Bell Laboratories (now AT&T Bell Laboratories, then as nowthe Labs''), and the ancestral home of UNIX. In planned (but not written) later parts, we would have looked at some of the myriad versions of UNIX - there are far more than one might suspect. This includes a look at Columbus and USG and at Berkeley Unix. You'll begin to get a glimpse inside the history of the major streams of development of the system during that time. News Roundup My FreeBSD Development Setup I do my FreeBSD development using git, tmux, vim and cscope. I keep a FreeBSD fork on my github, I have forked https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd to https://github.com/adventureloop/freebsd OPNsense 19.7.6 released As we are experiencing the Suricata community first hand in Amsterdam we thought to release this version a bit earlier than planned. Included is the latest Suricata 5.0.0 release in the development version. That means later this November we will releasing version 5 to the production version as we finish up tweaking the integration and maybe pick up 5.0.1 as it becomes available. LDAP TLS connectivity is now integrated into the system trust store, which ensures that all required root and intermediate certificates will be seen by the connection setup when they have been added to the authorities section. The same is true for trusting self-signed certificates. On top of this, IPsec now supports public key authentication as contributed by Pascal Mathis. HardenedBSD November 2019 Status Report. We at HardenedBSD have a lot of news to share. On 05 Nov 2019, Oliver Pinter resigned amicably from the project. All of us at HardenedBSD owe Oliver our gratitude and appreciation. This humble project, named by Oliver, was born out of his thesis work and the collaboration with Shawn Webb. Oliver created the HardenedBSD repo on GitHub in April 2013. The HardenedBSD Foundation was formed five years later to carry on this great work. DNSSEC enabled in default unbound(8) configuration. DNSSEC validation has been enabled in the default unbound.conf(5) in -current. The relevant commits were from Job Snijders (job@) How to Install Shopware with NGINX and Let's Encrypt on FreeBSD 12 Shopware is the next generation of open source e-commerce software. Based on bleeding edge technologies like Symfony 3, Doctrine2 and Zend Framework Shopware comes as the perfect platform for your next e-commerce project. This tutorial will walk you through the Shopware Community Edition (CE) installation on FreeBSD 12 system by using NGINX as a web server. Requirements Make sure your system meets the following minimum requirements: Linux-based operating system with NGINX or Apache 2.x (with mod_rewrite) web server installed. PHP 5.6.4 or higher with ctype, gd, curl, dom, hash, iconv, zip, json, mbstring, openssl, session, simplexml, xml, zlib, fileinfo, and pdo/mysql extensions. PHP 7.1 or above is strongly recommended. MySQL 5.5.0 or higher. Possibility to set up cron jobs. Minimum 4 GB available hard disk space. IonCube Loader version 5.0.0 or higher (optional). How to Compile RainbowCrack on OpenBSD Project RainbowCrack was originally Zhu Shuanglei's implementation, it's not clear to me if the project is still just his or if it's even been maintained for a while. His page seems to have been last updated in August 2007. The Project RainbowCrack web page now has just binaries for Windows XP and Linux, both 32-bit and 64-bit versions. Earlier versions were available as source code. The version 1.2 source code does not compile on OpenBSD, and in my experience it doesn't compile on Linux, either. It seems to date from 2004 at the earliest, and I think it makes some version-2.4 assumptions about Linux kernel headers. You might also look at ophcrack, a more modern tool, although it seems to be focused on cracking Windows XP/Vista/7/8/10 password hashes Feedback/Questions Reese - Amature radio info Chris - VPN Malcolm - NAT Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv Your browser does not support the HTML5 video tag.
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Nov 20, 2019 • 0sec

Low Cost Home Camera System | Self-Hosted 6

Chris follows up on his Shinobi troubles and extols the virtues of $25 Wyze Cams to Alex, who has some exciting house news to share.Links:Wyze Cam | 1080p HD Smart Home Camera With Free AWS CloudWyze Cam RTSP – WyzeShinobi Official Documentation - Get StartedShinobi Official Documentation - Motion DetectionShinobi Articles - How to use Motion DetectionShinobi Articles - How I optimized my RTSP cameraNest camera hacked: Hacker spoke to babyYou should not run your mail server because mail is hard — In this article, I will voluntarily use the term mail because it is vague enough to encompass protocols and software. This is not a very technical article and I don’t want to dive into protocols, I want people who have never worked with mail to understand all of it.12tb Easystore drive for $179.99

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