

LINUX Unplugged
Jupiter Broadcasting
An open show powered by community LINUX Unplugged takes the best attributes of open collaboration and turns it into a weekly show about Linux.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 31, 2018 • 1h 43min
Episode 273: International Hat Machines
We speculate about a future where IBM owns Red Hat, and review the latest Fedora 29 release that promises a new game changing feature.
Plus Chris returns from MeetBSD with his review, and we get the inside scope on System76’s Thelio hardware.Special Guests: Alan Pope and Martin Wimpress.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:LKML: Greg KH: Linux 4.19 — These past few months has been a tough one for our community, as it is
our community that is fighting from within itself, with prodding from
others outside of it. Don't fall into the cycle of arguing about those
"others" in the "Judean People's Front" when we are the "We're the
People's Front of Judea!" That is the trap that countless communities
have fallen into over the centuries. We all share the same goal, let us
never loose sight of that.Samsung Open-Source Group Reportedly Shuts Down - Phoronix — Samsung has apparently shut down the Samsung Open-Source Group (Samsung OSG) as a blow to the wider free software ecosystem considering the group's prolific contributions over the years from low-level open-source projects to desktop/user-facing code-bases. You Can Play Over 2,600 Windows Games on Linux Via Steam PlayProtonDBThinkPad Thunderbolt 3 Workstation Dock — The ThinkPad Thunderbolt 3 WorkStation Dock is a pioneering docking solution powered by Intel Thunderbolt technology and is designed exclusively for ThinkPad Mobile Workstations, delivering up to 230W power to charge both notebook and a full range of productivity and connectivity peripherals. System76 Shares With Us More Details On Thelio Open Hardware, Pricing Starts At $1,100 USDSystem76 on US Manufacturing and Open Hardware — To further our open computer ambition, we’re working to remove functionality from the proprietary mainboard. To that end, we designed Thelio Io, a daughter board that manages thermal and chassis control while also providing a storage backplane for the drives in Thelio. It’s open hardware and open source firmware, and a big step in the right direction. 1 Billion pulls from Docker Hub.IBM TO ACQUIRE RED HAT — IBM will acquire all of the issued and outstanding common shares of Red Hat for $190.00 per share in cash, representing a total enterprise value of approximately $34 billion.Statement on the IBM acquisition of Red Hat — Nevertheless, the world has moved on. Replacing UNIX is no longer sufficient. The decline in RHEL growth contrasted with the acceleration in Linux more broadly is a strong market indicator of the next wave of open source. Public cloud workloads have largely avoided RHEL. RHEL 7.6 Released — Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.6 is designed to be the trusted bedrock for hybrid cloud deploymentsAnnouncing the release of Fedora 29 — This release is particularly exciting because it’s the first to include the Fedora Modularity feature across all our different variants. Modularity lets us ship different versions of packages on the same Fedora base. What is Modularity :: Fedora Docs Site — Different users have different needs. Developers want the latest versions possible, system administrators want stability for longer period of time. There are many Linux distributions out there, each targeting a different audience, for example Fedora vs. CentOS.Working with modules in Fedora — This article puts one of those modules to practical use, covering installation and setup of Review Board 3.0 using modules.Blog - Chris Goes to MeetBSD — MeetBSD 2018 took place at the sprawling Intel Santa Clara campus. The venue itself felt more like an olive branch than a simple friendly gesture by Intel. In truth it felt like a bit of an apology. You get the subtle sense they feel bad about how the BSD's were treated with the Meltdown and Specter flaws.TAP ROOM For the Ask Noah PartyDbxfs - Mount Dropbox Folder Locally As Virtual File System In Linux — The dbxfs officially supports Linux and Mac OS. However, it should work on any POSIX system that provides a FUSE-compatible library or has the ability to mount SMB shares.PSA: Dropbox ext4 limitation workaround — Create a loopback!TaskBook — Popey recommended!

Oct 23, 2018 • 58min
Episode 272: Prepare for Pipewire
The lead developer of PipeWire Wim Taymans joins us to discuss Linux’s multimedia past, and its exciting future. They promise to greatly improve handling of audio and video under Linux.
Plus we review the professional grade Precision 5530, tour our new studio in a box, and release one of our first production tools as free software!Special Guest: Wim Taymans.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:JACK Audio Connection Kit|HomeGetJacked · GitHub — Some simple scripts to build a "Studio in a Box" with JACK.PipeWire — PipeWire is a project that aims to greatly improve handling of audio and video under Linux. PipeWire WikiLaunching Pipewire! Precision 15 Inch 5530 Developer Edition — Dell’s thinnest, lightest and smallest 15" mobile workstation is more powerful than ever. Precision 5530 Benchmarks — JB1 Reaper Custom Build vs Dell Precision 5300TechSNAP Episode 385: 3 Things to Know About Kubernetes — Kubernetes expert Will Boyd joins us to explain the top 3 things to know about KubernetesTechSNAP Episode 386: What Makes Google Cloud Different — We bring on our Google Cloud expert and explore the fundamentals, demystify some of the magic, and ask what makes Google Cloud different. TechSNAP Episode 387: Private Cloud Building Blocks — We bring in Amy Marrich to break down the building blocks of OpenStack.

Oct 17, 2018 • 1h 42min
Episode 271: Juno Jubilation
elementary OS’ latest and greatest released today, and we talk with Dan and Cassidy from the project about their biggest release yet.
Then community news, a preview of upcoming Ubuntu 18.10, and we announce our own free software project. Plus a chat with Dalton about the new Ubuntu Touch release and we find a real Photoshop replacement for Linux. Special Guests: Alan Pope, Brent Gervais, Cassidy James Blaede, Dalton Durst, Danielle Foré, and Martin Wimpress.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Tiny Palm smartphone baffles gadget fans - BBC News — A tiny Android smartphone designed to be a "companion phone".KDE e.V. receives a sizeable donation from Handshake Foundation | KDE.news — We are excited to announce that the KDE e.V. received a donation of 300,000 USD from the Handshake Foundation. elementary OS 5 Juno is Here — Refinement, Productivity, & an Improved Developer Platform.Allen questions the Flatpak FUD - Pastebin.comFlatpaks, sandboxes and security — What Flatpak brings to this is understanding of the specific desktop app problem space Should GNOME Drop Support for GTK3 Themes? — It seems that our love of customisation is merely an illusionRestyling apps at scale — tl;dr: If you want to change how an app looks, you need a designer in the loop.DXVK 0.90 released : linuxPumpkin Carving Contest #JackOLinux — Submission deadline is October 24, 2018, and the top 3 winners will be announced on October 31st!Chrome OS Stable Channel Gets Linux AppsDid Microsoft Really Just “Open Source All Its Patents”?? — This means the company can use or distribute ‘Linux System’ technologies without risk that another OIN participant may assert their patents against such ‘Linux System’ technologies.Ubuntu 18.10 Release Date and New Features [Updated] | It's FOSSGPD Pocket 2 Preview — The GPD Pocket 2 is a handheld computer that looks like a laptop, but which is small enough to fold up and slide into your pocket.UBports — Ubuntu Touch is the touch-friendly mobile version of Ubuntu. This operating system is developed and maintained by UBports: An international community of passionate volunteers. This means Ubuntu Touch is 100% community driven and independent.
Read more about the OSUbuntu Touch OTA-5 —
While many have already joined the community on 16.04 with OTA-4, in addition to the long-term support of upstream Ubuntu development, OTA-5 will include a more stable experience, new tweaks, and new features to show off this next stage of Ubuntu Touch development.Dalton Durst's GitHubDaltonDurst - Ubuntu WikiAutomation System NamingJupiter Broadcasting · GitHubPhotopea

Oct 10, 2018 • 1h 10min
Episode 270: Stratis Pulls it All Together
Red Hat developer Andy Grover joins us to discuss Stratis Storage, an alternative to ZFS on Linux and its recent milestone.
Also Google subtracts Plus, some KDE and GNOME news, and a bit of forgotten Linux history.Special Guests: Alan Pope, Alex Kretzschmar, Andy Grover, and Martin Wimpress.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:IRL GlassesGoogle Exposed User Data, Feared Repercussions of Disclosing to Public — Google exposed the private data of hundreds of thousands of users of the Google+ social network and then opted not to disclose the issue this past spring, in part because of fears that doing so would draw regulatory scrutiny and cause reputational damage, according to people briefed on the incident and documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.Project Strobe — The consumer version of Google+ currently has low usage and engagement: 90 percent of Google+ user sessions are less than five seconds.Google Has 'No Plans' to Enable Chrome Hardware Acceleration on LinuxKDE Plasma 5.14 — A lot of work has gone into improving Discover, Plasma's software manager, and, among other things, we have added a Firmware Update feature and many subtle user interface improvements to give it a smoother feel. Farewell, application menus! — These menus have been with us since the beginning of the GNOME 3.0 series, but we’re planning on retiring them for the next GNOME release (version 3.32). Creative Selection (Audiobook) by Ken KociendaEazel - Wikipedia — Eazel was founded by Andy Hertzfeld in August 1999 in Mountain View, California. It had 22 initial employees and raised $12 million from a number of venture capital investment companiesEazel launches Nautilus software then lays off 40 workers — After releasing the first version of its new Nautilus open-source desktop software with much fanfare Monday, Eazel Inc. bit the bullet just a day later and laid off more than half of its 70-member staffJobs at Linux AcademyAndy Grover (@iamagrover) — Hacks on @StratisStorage at Red Hat, and has other creative dreams too. Bass. Rustlang. Mostly cat and political retweets these days.Stratis Storage (@StratisStorage) — Easy to use local storage for Linux.
Stratis Storage Project PageStratis: Easy local storage management for Linux [LWN.net] — Stratis is a new local storage-management solution for Linux. It can be compared to ZFS, Btrfs, or LVM. Its focus is on simplicity of concepts and ease of use, while giving users access to advanced storage features. Internally, Stratis's implementation favors tight integration of existing components instead of the fully-integrated, in-kernel approach that ZFS and Btrfs use. XFS vs EXT4 – Comparing MongoDB Performance on AWS EC2 — In performance terms, XFS is indeed a force multiplier when paired with high speed disks that it can take real advantage from. For low to mid-end systems, it doesn’t seem to be able to do much to improve your performance.Todoist for Linux, an electron wrapper for the official Todoist web app. — Todoist for Linux, an electron wrapper for the official Todoist web app.

Oct 3, 2018 • 1h 4min
Episode 269: Alternate Desktop Universe
What if desktop computing went a very different direction in the late 90s? Deeply multithreaded from the start, fast, intuitive, and extremely stable. This is the world of Haiku, and we go for a visit.
Plus the latest community news, true flicker freedom comes to Fedora, and our favorite tools for easy virtual machines on our laptops.Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar and Brent Gervais.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:System76 To Release A "New Open-Source Computer"Fedora 29 Succeeds At Flicker-Free Boot Experience On Intel HardwareGoogle gets into game streaming with Project Stream and Assassin’s Creed Odyssey in ChromeHalloween DocumentsBeOS R5R1/beta1 – Release Notes | Haiku Project — It’s been just about a month less than six years since Haiku’s last release in November 2012Ars spends too much time trying to work in Haiku, the BeOS successor — What starts as a joke
Turned into a fool's errand
"I'll work in Haiku."The Be Book - The Application Kits-tui: Terminal based CPU stress and monitoring utility — Terminal based CPU stress and monitoring utilityLenovo-throttling-fix — Workaround for Intel throttling issues in Linux.fwupd - ArchWiki — fwupd is a simple daemon allowing to update some devices firmware, including UEFI BIOS for several machines.
Virtual Machine Manager Home — The virt-manager application is a desktop user interface for managing virtual machines through libvirt. It primarily targets KVM VMs, but also manages Xen and LXC (linux containers).Kimchi — Kimchi is an HTML5 based management tool for KVM. It is designed to make it as easy as possible to get started with KVM and create your first guest.python-imaging Ubuntu Package

Sep 26, 2018 • 1h 13min
Episode 268: Elementary, My Dear Plasma
We chat with Nate Graham who’s pushing to make Plasma the best desktop on the planet. We discuss his contributions to this effort, and others.
Plus we get the scope on a new Juno feature from the source, and the creator of WSLinux a distro built specifically for Windows 10’s Windows Subsystem for Linux joins us.
Also some community news, some old friends stop by, and more!Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar, Brent Gervais, Cassidy James Blaede, Hayden Barnes, Martin Wimpress, and Nate Graham.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:ytdl-webserver: 📻 Webserver for downloading youtube videos. Ready for docker.Google Secretly Logs Users Into Chrome Whenever They Log Into a Google Site — Starting with Chrome 69, whenever a Chrome user would access a Google-owned site, the browser would take that user's Google identity and log the user into the Chrome in-browser account systemChristoph Tavan on Twitter — "Clear all Cookies except Google Cookies", thanks Chrome."PlayOnLinux 5.0 Alpha Released With Redesigned UI, Phoenicis — PlayOnLinux 5.0 Alpha has a completely redesigned user-interface and rolls out their new "Phoenicis" platform. This new platform is decentralized, Git-based, and improves POL's script engine. The current PlayOnLinux 5.0 Alpha release has support for about 135 different games. AppCenter and Content Ratings — Starting with Juno, we’ll display a content warning when a user goes to download an app that meets or exceeds a certain level of OARS data—think nudity, violence, or language content.Getting the team together to revolutionize Linux audio — With the video part of PipeWire already in production we decided the time has come to try to accelerate the development of the audio bits. So PipeWire creator Wim Taymans, PulseAudio developer Arun Raghavan and myself decided to try to host a PipeWire hackfest this fall to bring together many of the core Linux audio developers to try to hash out a plan and a roadmap.Precision 15 Inch 5530 Mobile Workstation LaptopNate Graham is creating KDE Plasma | Patreon — I'm Nate Graham, and I'm on a mission to make KDE Plasma the best and most widely-used computer operating system interface on planet Earth. KDE's Goals for 2018 and Beyond | KDE.news — Nate reasons that focusing on irksome details of the most common and commonly used of KDE's software, such as Plasma, Dolphin, Okular and Discover, would be the first step towards polishing the whole. This week in Usability & Productivity, part 37 — Here’s your latest Usability & Productivity report–and we’ve got all kinds of goodies to share!Recommended Watch: Konquering the World'Netflix for Open Source' Wants Developers to Get Paid — A startup called Tidelift hopes to help these unsung programmers get paid with a business model the company compares to Netflix. The idea is that a company pays a subscription fee to Tidelift, which takes a cut and then distributes the remainder to open source projects that the subscriber uses, such as Babel. In exchange, the subscriber gets assurance that the software is properly maintained.TideliftWLinux — A Linux distro optimized for WSL based on Debian.WLinux: GitHubJohn's +1 to Root on ZFSzedenv — ZFS boot environment managerTraefik - The Cloud Native Edge Router / Reverse Proxy / Load BalancerKDE - KDE Community Code of Conduct

Sep 19, 2018 • 1h 19min
Episode 267: People Patches
Linus takes a break and the Linux kernel adopts a new Code of Conduct. We work through these major watershed moments, and discuss what it means for the community.
Plus our review of our brand new ThinkPad T480’s running Linux, the bug you need to know about, and why this might be one of the greatest Linux laptops of all time.Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar, Brent Gervais, Danielle Foré, and Eric Hendricks.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Cloudflare goes InterPlanetaryLinux 4.19-rc4 released, an apology, and a maintainership noteCode of Conduct: Let's revamp it.Code of conduct - Gentoo WikiNCoC: No Code of Conduct: A Code of Conduct for Adults in Open Source SoftwareRichard M. Stallman on the Linux CoCCode of Conduct: Let's revamp it.Lenovo ThinkPad T480Ubuntu on Lenovo ThinkPad T480Lenovo ThinkPad T480 - ArchWikiT480s Linux throttling bugWorkaround for Intel throttling issues in Linux.ThinkWikiKXStudioOptimised Ubuntu Desktop images available in Microsoft Hyper-V gallery

Sep 12, 2018 • 55min
Episode 266: From Jupiter to Beyond
We announce our big news, Jupiter Broadcasting is joining Linux Academy and what we have planned for the future is huge!
Plus a new NextCloud lands, concerns are brewing for the Solus project, and a report from the recent Libre Application Summit.Special Guests: Alan Pope, Anthony James, Brent Gervais, and Martin Wimpress.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Jupiter Broadcasting Joins Linux Academy — Jupiter Broadcasting has been creating the world’s favorite podcasts on Linux, open source, and free software since before they were even called podcasts.
By teaming up, we’re bringing together two industry-leading companies that develop and deliver the content that our community really wants.Nextcloud 14 now availableSupercharging Solus Infrastructure — Because of the timing of these upgrades and our lack of access to the solus-project.com domain, Bryan and I are going to be shifting Solus services over to the getsol.us domain.

Sep 5, 2018 • 50min
Episode 265: Privacy Priorities
Intel has disappointed the kernel community with its latest security disclosures but there’s still hope for a better future. That’s more than can be said for the state of privacy on Android, so we discuss some alternatives.
Plus the latest community updates, a new timeline for the Librem 5, tempting new Chromebooks, and some top picks.Special Guests: Alan Pope and Eric Hendricks.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Airplane Mode: A box designed to seduce you into digital disconnectionLMDE 3 “Cindy” Cinnamon released!GNOME Tweaks 3.30Purism Pushes Back The Librem 5 Progress update from the Librem 5 hardware departmentZeroPhone: $50 open source smartphoneGoogle won’t patch flaw in old versions of AndroidAndroid collecting 10 times more data than iOS, claims study$600 Chromebooks are a dangerous development for MicrosoftLinux Kernel Developer Criticizes Intel's Meltdown DisclosureLinus Torvalds talks frankly about Intel security bugs | ZDNetLinux 4.19 lets you declare your trust in AMD, IBM and IntelProven: An alternative to Twitter's verified accounts powered by Keybaserat: Compose shell commands to build interactive terminal applicationstcpdump101.com: Build packet capture syntax online

Aug 29, 2018 • 1h 8min
Episode 264: Proton, Electron for Games!
Steam Play rocks the Linux world as it promises new levels of compatibility with AAA Windows games. But the story of how Valve is doing it might be just as fascinating.
Plus community news, our thoughts on building a market for Linux apps, the latest from UBPorts, and more good news from LVFS!Special Guests: Alan Pope, Brent Gervais, Marius Gripsgard, and Martin Wimpress.Sponsored By:DigitalOcean: Visit do.co/unplugged for a limited time special offer, or enter dounplugged after you create your account for a $10 credit. Promo Code: dounpluggedTing: Visit linux.ting.com and get a $25 discount off a device, or $25 in service credit if you bring one!Linux Academy: Visit linuxacademy.com/unplugged to support the show and sign up for a 7 day free trial.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Realtek on the LVFS!Fedora Moves Ahead With Plans To Drop Packages Having Bad SecurityUbuntu Touch OTA-4 ReleaseKDE ItineraryUpdated: Intel Answers Complaints About Microcode Benchmarking BanBenchmarks Of Intel's Latest Linux Microcode UpdateOrganizing a Market for ApplicationsLibre Application SummitOrigin of the name Proton — We've been working on this for a long time. We needed an internal codename we could use that wouldn't tip our hand if it leaked (so Wine puns are out), and that we wouldn't be embarrassed to continue using after release (sorry, BadgerBadgerBadger). A bunch of ideas were tossed around the CodeWeavers office one afternoon, and I ended up picking Proton because it's short, easy to remember, sounds cool, and is hard to Google for.
Although, I like your explanation too :)Wine and Steam - A Major Milestone — We have been working directly with Valve for two years on this effort,How do I use Proton via command line?Protontricks: A simple wrapper that does winetricks things for Proton enabled games, requires Winetricks.


