All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Jupiter Broadcasting
undefined
Mar 31, 2020 • 0sec

Arm is Here | LINUX Unplugged 347

We discover a few simple Raspberry Pi tricks that unlock incredible performance and make us re-think the capabilities of Arm systems. Plus we celebrate Wireguard finally landing in Linux, catch up on feedback, and check out the new Manjaro laptop.Special Guests: Brent Gervais and Philip Muller.Links:Raspberry Pi Ubuntu Server 20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa) Daily Build WireGuard 1.0.0 for Linux 5.6 Released LUP Started Covering WireGuard in June of 2016 Linux 5.6 Ships With Broken Intel WiFi Driver After Network Security Fixes Go Awry Linux 5.6 Is The Most Exciting Kernel In Years With So Many New Features Btrfs Ready For Linux 5.6 With Async Discard For Better Efficiency + Performance EXT4 Gets Performance Work While XFS Gets 32-Bit Fixes For Linux 5.6 F2FS Experimental Compression Is Ready For Extending Flash Storage Life Multipath TCP Support Is Working Its Upstream - First Bits Landing With Linux 5.6 USB4 Support Lands In The Linux 5.6 Kernel Linux 5.6 Is The First Kernel For 32-Bit Systems Ready To Run Past Year 2038 VirtualBox Shared Folder Driver Seeks Inclusion In Linux 5.6 User Error 88 Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar Keep the conversation going join us on Telegram Feedback: Arch to FreeBSD? Feedback: Pi4 Fixes Raspberry Pi 4 Rev 1.2 Fixes USB-C Power Issues, Improves SD Card Resilience Feedback: Pi4 Projects Raspberry Pi NAS SATA Adapter Stackable X828 2.5" SATA HDD/SSD Cluster – Geekworm Feedback: Downsides of JSON in the Shell LINUX Unplugged 341: Long Term Rolling JC: JSON in the Shell Long Term Rolling Feedback Feedback: Try NixOS already! Feedback: Timeshift Story and Question Armbian – Linux for ARM development boards
undefined
Mar 31, 2020 • 0sec

User Error: What Will Change Post-virus? | Jupiter Extras 67

Joe, Alan, and Dan speculate about what the world will be like after the situation with Coronavirus is under control and life returns to something resembling normality.Special Guests: Alan Pope and Daniel Fore.
undefined
Mar 29, 2020 • 0sec

Linux Action News 151

Mozilla puts your money where your mouse is and partners with Scroll to launch Firefox for a Better Web. We'll explain the details, and why it might just have a shot. Plus we try out Plasma Bigscreen, cover Telegram's really bad news, and much more.Links:Try our latest Test Pilot, Firefox for a Better Web, offering privacy and faster access to great content — Today we are launching a new Test Pilot initiative called Firefox Better Web with Scroll. Scroll partners with Firefox to build a better internetScroll - a better internetFirefox Better Web with ScrollFirefox is launching a new test pilot with Scroll to pay web publishersPlasma Bigscreen — Plasma BigScreen is a platform intended to use on smart TVs with big remote-friendly UI controls, and Voice activation. What technology did we use for it? Plasma (of course!) and Mycroft.Plasma Bigscreen HomepageGoogle Play’s malicious app problem infects 1.7 million more devices — Apps went undetected by Google and antivirus scanners.Google Enlists Outside Help to Clean Up Android's Malware Mess — The newly formed App Defense Alliance will try to solve a malware problem that has bedeviled the Play Store since inception.Chrome and Chrome OS release updates resume — Today we’re sharing an update as we’re now resuming releases with an adjusted scheduleMicrosoft goes into Windows lockdown for builds from May — Microsoft on Tuesday said it has decided to halt Windows preview releases in May due to health concerns arising from the COVID-19 coronavirus crisis.Federal court judge grants temporary injunction against Telegram — Judge sides with the SEC and says that Telegram's upcoming crypto is likely a security. It's barred from distributing Grams, the currency for its TON blockchain network, until trial.
undefined
Mar 27, 2020 • 0sec

Brunch with Brent: Aleix Pol | Jupiter Extras 66

Brent sits down with Aleix Pol, president of KDE e.V., KDE software developer, co-founder of Linux App Summit and Barcelona Free Software. We discuss his longstanding collaborations within the KDE community, developer sponsorships in open source business models, and more.Special Guest: Aleix Pol.Links:KDE e.V.KDE Education ProjectKDE - Notable Uses - WikipediaBlue Systems — International developers working on Free/Libre SoftwareNetrunner GNU/Linux — KDE Plasma on Debian StableLinux App SummitBarcelona Free SoftwareAkademy — KDE's annual world summitGUADEC — The GNOME ConferenceBrunch with Brent: Nuritzi SanchezBrunch with Brent: Heather EllsworthAleix Pol - @AleixPol on Twitter — aleixpol@kde.orgBrent Gervais - @brentgervais on Twitter
undefined
Mar 26, 2020 • 0sec

Well, Actually | User Error 88

The details that make a great distro, things that make us wince, smug people online, great photos, imposter syndrome, and more. 00:00:27 Do you ever get imposter syndrome? 00:08:16 What's your unusual "fingernails on chalkboard" equivalent? 00:12:26 What gives a Linux distro that feeling of polish? 00:23:16 What's your favorite photograph? 00:28:12 How do you feel when someone chimes in online with "well, actually…"?
undefined
Mar 26, 2020 • 0sec

FreeBSD, Corona: Fight! | BSD Now 343

Fighting the Coronavirus with FreeBSD, Wireguard VPN Howto in OPNsense, NomadBSD 1.3.1 available, fresh GhostBSD 20.02, New FuryBSD XFCE and KDE images, pf-badhost 0.3 released, and more. Headlines Fighting the Coronavirus with FreeBSD Here is a quick HOWTO for those who want to provide some FreeBSD based compute resources to help finding vaccines. UPDATE 2020-03-22: 0mp@ made a port out of this, it is in “biology/linux-foldingathome”. Per default it will now pick up some SARS-CoV‑2 (COVID-19) related folding tasks. There are some more config options (e.g. how much of the system resources are used). Please refer to the official Folding@Home site for more information about that. Be also aware that there is a big rise in compute resources donated to Folding@Home, so the pool of available work units may be empty from time to time, but they are working on adding more work units. Be patient. How to configure the Wireguard VPN in OPNsense WireGuard is a modern designed VPN that uses the latest cryptography for stronger security, is very lightweight, and is relatively easy to set up (mostly). I say ‘mostly’ because I found setting up WireGuard in OPNsense to be more difficult than I anticipated. The basic setup of the WireGuard VPN itself was as easy as the authors claim on their website, but I came across a few gotcha's. The gotcha's occur with functionality that is beyond the scope of the WireGuard protocol so I cannot fault them for that. My greatest struggle was configuring WireGuard to function similarly to my OpenVPN server. I want the ability to connect remotely to my home network from my iPhone or iPad, tunnel all traffic through the VPN, have access to certain devices and services on my network, and have the VPN devices use my home's Internet connection. WireGuard behaves more like a SSH server than a typical VPN server. With WireGuard, devices which have shared their cryptographic keys with each other are able to connect via an encrypted tunnel (like a SSH server configured to use keys instead of passwords). The devices that are connecting to one another are referred to as “peer” devices. When the peer device is an OPNsense router with WireGuard installed, for instance, it can be configured to allow access to various resources on your network. It becomes a tunnel into your network similar to OpenVPN (with the appropriate firewall rules enabled). I will refer to the WireGuard installation on OPNsense as the server rather than a “peer” to make it more clear which device I am configuring unless I am describing the user interface because that is the terminology used interchangeably by WireGuard. The documentation I found on WireGuard in OPNsense is straightforward and relatively easy to understand, but I had to wrestle with it for a little while to gain a better understanding on how it should be configured. I believe it was partially due to differing end goals – I was trying to achieve something a little different than the authors of other wiki/blog/forum posts. Piecing together various sources of information, I finally ended up with a configuration that met the goals stated above. News Roundup NomadBSD 1.3.1 NomadBSD 1.3.1 has recently been made available. NomadBSD is a lightweight and portable FreeBSD distribution, designed to run on live on a USB flash drive, allowing you to plug, test, and play on different hardware. They have also started a forum as of yesterday, where you can ask questions and mingle with the NomadBSD community. Notable changes in 1.3.1 are base system upgraded to FreeBSD 12.1-p2. automatic network interface setup improved, image size increased to over 4GB, Thunderbird, Zeroconf, and some more listed below. GhostBSD 20.02 Eric Turgeon, main developer of GhostBSD, has announced version 20.02 of the FreeBSD based operating system. Notable changes are ZFS partition into the custom partition editor installer, allowing you to install alongside with Windows, Linux, or macOS. Other changes are force upgrade all packages on system upgrade, improved update station, and powerd by default for laptop battery performance. New FuryBSD XFCE and KDE images This new release is now based on FreeBSD 12.1 with the latest FreeBSD quarterly packages. This brings XFCE up to 4.14, and KDE up to 5.17. In addition to updates this new ISO mostly addresses community bugs, community enhancement requests, and community pull requests. Due to the overwhelming amount of reports with GitHub hosting all new releases are now being pushed to SourceForge only for the time being. Previous releases will still be kept for archive purposes. pf-badhost 0.3 Released pf-badhost is a simple, easy to use badhost blocker that uses the power of the pf firewall to block many of the internet's biggest irritants. Annoyances such as SSH and SMTP bruteforcers are largely eliminated. Shodan scans and bots looking for webservers to abuse are stopped dead in their tracks. When used to filter outbound traffic, pf-badhost blocks many seedy, spooky malware containing and/or compromised webhosts. Beastie Bits DragonFly i915 drm update CShell is punk rock The most surprising Unix programs Feedback/Questions Master One - Torn between OpenBSD and FreeBSD Brad - Follow up to Linus ZFS story Filipe Carvalho - Call for Portuguese BSD User Groups 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.
undefined
Mar 25, 2020 • 0sec

Keeping Track of Stuff | Self-Hosted 15

We have a neat self-hosted home inventory management system for preppers of any type, plus Chris' simple Home Assistant trick and Alex's valiant battle with the WebSockets daemon of the reverse proxies. Also - we answer listener questions, and share updates.Links:Grocy — ERP beyond your fridge - grocy is a web-based self-hosted groceries & household management solution for your homeHome Assistant Community Add-on: GrocyHome Assistant External Reverse Proxy Setup with nginx — I was running into an issue for a while tonight where I could get Home Assistant itself working just fine but any add-ons that used web sockets wouldn't load properly. Let's Encrypt, Nginx & Reverse Proxy Starter GuidePicture Elements Card - Home Assistant — The Picture Elements card is one of the most versatile types of cards.Screenshot of Chris' HA Watchful EyeGenmon — Generac Generator Monitoring using a Raspberry Pi and WiFiSalt-Level — Checks level of salt in water softner brine tankChrisLAS - Chris W. Fisher — Check out the ChrisLAS Cast
undefined
Mar 24, 2020 • 0sec

The One-Click Trap | LINUX Unplugged 346

We debate the dangers and advantages of one-click deployments. Then Dan from elementary OS shares an AppCenter for Everyone update. Plus a big batch of feedback that kicks off some wide-ranging discussions.Special Guests: Daniel Fore and Neal Gompa.Links:FOSS Responders — COVID-19 is impacting the open source industry in many ways. If you or your community has been impacted, please let us knowSeems that NVIDIA silently axed their GTC talk about Nouveau? Update: NVIDIA GTC 2020 Announcements Postponed EntirelyLemur Pro - System76 Brunch with Brent: Stuart Langridge Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar Keep the conversation going join us on Telegram FOSS Talk Live 2020 has been cancelled. — It seems very unlikely that London will be functioning by June so I have made this difficult call. I'm very sorry to anyone who has made travel and accommodation arrangements but I trust that everyone will understand why this had to be done.TXLF 2020 Rescheduled — Given the recommendations by public health officials, we have decided to not have Texas Linux Fest on May 2020 at the Palmer Events Center in Austin, TX. We are currently investigating opportunities to bring parts of Texas Linux Fest online.Unfilter is Back TurnKey GNU/Linux — a free Debian based library of system images that pre-integrates and polishes the best free software components into secure, easy to use solutions. Sandstorm — an open source project built by a community of volunteers with the goal of making it really easy to run open source web applications Bitnami Stack YunoHost — easily manage a server for your friends, association or enterprise. Dedicated Platform Package Manager — an easy way to install and manage server applications.Home Assistant Add-ons - Home Assistant Feedback: Backup software tips?Feedback: mac Apps and Little Snitch Little Snitch and the Deprecation of Kernel ExtensionsFeedback: Life at Microsoft Feedback: Mint Success Feedback: Mastodon Feedback: The Windows Burden
undefined
Mar 21, 2020 • 0sec

Linux Action News 150

Why Debian is facing one of its most critical moments yet, Microsoft and GitHub buy npm, and our thoughts on Linux Mint Debian Edition 4 "Debbie." Plus, why "Works with Chromebook" might be great for Linux, and using your GPU to fight the Coronavirus.Links:npm is joining GitHub — I’m excited to announce that GitHub has signed an agreement to acquire npm.The npm Blog — Next Phase MontageMicrosoft's GitHub absorbs NPM into its code-hosting empireGitHub for mobile is now availableLMDE 4 “Debbie” released! — LMDE is a Linux Mint project which stands for “Linux Mint Debian Edition”. Debian Project Leader Elections 2020 — Jonathan Carter Sruthi Chandran Brian GuptaPlatform for Jonathan CarterPlatform for Sruthi ChandranWorks With Chromebook — You’ll begin to see the Works With Chromebook badge on certified accessories in the U.S., Canada and Japan. Chromebooks Accessories & ChargersChrome OS to get native app for printing and scanningUpcoming Chrome and Chrome OS releases — Due to adjusted work schedules at this time, we are pausing upcoming Chrome and Chrome OS releases. PAPPL Is A New Printer Application Framework Made By The Founder Of CUPS — Michael Sweet, the lead developer of CUPS who had been at Apple for more than a decade since they acquired it, is now developing PAPPL as a printer application framework in addition to his work on the new LPrint project.Crowdsourced supercomputing project sets sights on coronavirus — Folding@home targets COVID-19, number of volunteer ‘folders’ skyrocketsThousands of These Computers Were Mining Cryptocurrency. Now They're Working on Coronavirus ResearchGamers... assemble. It's time to join forces with @NVIDIAGeForce and @OfficialPCMRNVIDIA GeForce on Twitter: PC Gamers, let’s put those GPUs to work. Firefox 74.0 Released — Firefox now provides better privacy for your web voice and video calls through support for mDNS ICE by cloaking your computer’s IP address with a random ID in certain WebRTC scenarios.
undefined
Mar 20, 2020 • 0sec

Brunch with Brent: Stuart Langridge | Jupiter Extras 65

Brent sits down with Stuart Langridge, co-host of Bad Voltage, for an exploration of open source's "final mile", the text and language interface as a UX opportunity, terminals vs. search engines, Darwinian processes and crab-bucketism in software development, and more.Special Guest: Stuart Langridge.Links:Bad Voltage — Tasty stuff for your ears.Bad Voltage 2×65: Email Avengers AssembleSuperhuman — The Fastest Email Experience Ever MadeBrunch with Brent: Alan PopeThe UX of Text - Talk by Stuart LangridgeSnow Crash by Neal Stephenson - WikipediaThe Wise Man's Fear by Patrick Rothfuss - WikipediaUnseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett - WikipediaMycroft — The World's First Open Source Voice AssistantCanonicalnpm is joining GitHubChrisLAS Cast 6 - Taking Notes with BrentItalian Hospital 3D Printing Valves For Reanimation Devices - 3D Printing Media NetworkJupiter Broadcasting Telegram GroupKryogenix ConsultingStuart Langridge - @sil on TwitterBrent Gervais - @brentgervais on Twitter

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app