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A Computer Lab, Browsers, Surfing, Electronic Zine, Endless Linking, What's New, Web MUD, Extensions and Add-Ons, CENTER Heresy, TEXTFILES.COM, Early Blog, Finger Servers, Growth and Complication, Lost Taste, Simplicity Underneath, Money Money, Walking Away, My Waiting Piano. A rumination of the echoes of revolution, told from one person's life. Part 3 of 4.
Wellness + Wisdom | Episode 644 What are the unconscious beliefs and programming that keep you enslaved? Alec Zeck, Aaron Abke, and Luke Storey join Josh Trent on the Wellness + Wisdom Podcast, episode 644, to dive deep into the meaning of common law, why we thrive in communities, how the collective consciousness has been taken over by darkness, and what urine therapy can do to your mind and body. "Common law is the bridge to a voluntary society. It is the pathway to revoking the contractual agreements that we have with various organizations representative of the government to then come back to a totally voluntary interaction between men and women." - Alec Zeck ❄️ Biohack Your Mind & Body with Plunge Ice Baths! Save $150 on your PLUNGE order with code WELLNESSFORCE As seen on Shark Tank, Plunge's revolutionary Cold Plunge uses powerful cooling, filtration, and sanitation to give you cold, clean water whenever you want it, making it far superior to an ice bath or chest freezer. ☀️ Live Life Well from Sunrise to Sunset with Organifi! Save 20% with code WELLNESSFORCE on everyone's favorite Superfoods brand, ORGANIFI, including their Sunrise to Sunset Bundle and their Women's Power Stack that includes HARMONY + GLOW for true hormonal balance and great health radiating through your beautiful skin. Click HERE to order your Organifi today.
"I know this isn't the time or the place, but, could you describe it to me?" A battalion of ghosts, perpetually reliving a moment of their troubled past alongside an acid lake, might not sound hauntingly beautiful. But to Safra, it means the world. Will their stolen moment of appreciation go unnoticed by their assailants? Probably not. Nominate us for CRiT Awards! https://bit.ly/crit2024 == CREDITS == Sponsored By Rapscallion, by Magpie Games Soundtrack "Strong Reclaimed" by Sayer Roberts "Hypnotic" by Enigmanic, Epidemic Sound "60's Computer Lab" from Tabletop Audio "A Winter to Remember" by Trevor Kowalski, Epidemic Sound "Augury" by Sun Chime, Epidemic Sound "Windy Silk" by Isobel O'Connor, Epidemic Sound "Observations" by From Now On, Epidemic Sound "Fine Revelation" by Walt Adams, Epidemic Sound "Wiggly Giggly" by Mike Franklyn, Epidemic Sound "Del giorno" by Daniel Fridell, Epidemic Sound "Chicken Got No Head" by River Foxcroft, Epidemic Sound "The Wind Is Changing" by Howard Harper-Barnes, Epidemic Sound "Milkshake" by Jerry Lacey, Epidemic Sound "No One Sleeps Tonight" by Leimoti, Epidemic Sound "Family Secrets" by Dream Cave, Epidemic Sound "Bittersweet World" by Martin Gauffin, Epidemic Sound "Steady Hands" by Stationary, Epidemic Sound "Sour Lemonade" by Jerry Lacey, Epidemic Sound "Like Moths to a Flame" by Alec Slayne, Epidemic Sound "Monsoon Rain" by Kikoru, Epidemic Sound "Spatter" by Jon Bjork, Epidemic Sound "Precision Moment" by Experian, Epidemic Sound "This is the Unknown" by Christian Andersen, Epidemic Sound "Disembodied Spirits" from Tabletop Audio "Lord Gallagher" by Alec Slayne, Epidemic Sound "Ferocious Fire" by Isaac Kageyama, Epidemic Sound "Immovable Mountains" by Isaku Kageyama, Epidemic Sound
You can listen to today's episode in the Computer Lab. Getting ready for a 70 degree day in February. Everything is fine. Why is Wendy's considering sliding pricing? Top 5 vegetables & so much more on a Tuesdee!
Enjoy this episode? Please share it with at least ONE friend who you think needs to hear it! In this episode Alec is joined by Dr. Mark Bailey and Steve Falconer to discuss Mark's paper, “A Farwell to Virology” as well as Steve's film adaptation of the paper. This episode includes a deep dive on: – viral genomics and genetics – PCR – the timeline of events that led up to the claim of a “pandemic” in 2020 – the foundational “scientific” papers that paved the way for the charade of 2020 Turn your homesteading, retreat center, or off-grid dream into a reality with Living the Off-Grid Dream: Https://thewayfwrd.com/offgrid. Members of The Way Forward receive a free consultation with Jaymie. Become a member of The Way Forward here: https://thewayfwrd.com/membership-sign-up/ Organic Muscle is revolutionizing sports nutrition by exclusively utilizing non-GMO ingredients from USDA Organic farms. Experience the fusion of organic purity and scientific excellence at https://organicmuscle.com, and unlock a 15% discount with code "Forward15" at checkout. Dr. Mark Bailey is a microbiology, medical industry and health researcher who worked in medical practice, including clinical trials, for two decades. In 2016 he left clinical practice due to dissatisfaction with the allopathic medical system. Mark is the author of “A Farewell To Virology (Expert Edition)” and co-author of “The COVID-19 Fraud & War on Humanity”. Steve Falconer is a living man, individualist, anarchist, researcher, author, political commentator and film maker, best known as one half of the popular channel Spacebusters on Vigilante.tv, Bitchute, Odyseee and Youtube. For more on Dr. Bailey and “A Farewell to Virology,” please visit: https://drsambailey.com/ For more on Steve and “A Farewell to Virology” the film, Part 1: https://www.bitchute.com/video/5EAWnkwUuJWJ/ Part 2: https://www.bitchute.com/video/p1bkp55x78aK/ Join us for Confluence, April 5-8 on a regenerative ranch, under a solar eclipse, in Bandera, TX. Confluence is a one-of-a-kind gathering on a regenerative ranch amongst health and freedom community that includes workshops, lectures, regeneratively-grown food, music, dancing, camping, glamping, bonfires, and more. Get tickets at ConfluenceEvent.com. Enter code ZECK10 at checkout for 10% off. Check out last year's aftermovie: https://youtu.be/TqL2wVBKuo0?si=kC6hTJxZWdPn6HSv FIND YOUR PEOPLE! Join The Way Forward to connect with like minded men and women near you, businesses near you, and more! The best part? You pay whatever you want!: https://thewayfwrd.com/membership-sign-up/ Visit our online marketplace for discounts on a variety of the best holistic health brands and products: https://thewayfwrd.com/store/ Support The Way Forward and Alec's work: https://thewayfwrd.com/donate/ For all of our links, visit: https://www.flowcode.com/page/thewayforward For more on The Way Forward, please visit: https://thewayfwrd.com Do you run a freedom-oriented or holistic health-oriented business? Join our FREE business directory here: https://thewayfwrd.com/directory-form/ Follow The Way Forward on Telegram: https://t.me/thewayforwardformankind Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/T.Way.Forward Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the.way.fwrd/ Sign up for our newsletter: https://thewayfwrd.com/newsletter/ You can watch The Way Forward Podcast on YouTube, Unite, Bitchute & Rumble Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWayFwrd Unite: https://unite.live/channels/the-way-forward/the-way-forward Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/a3s3CiyELVd8/ Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/TheWayFwrd ** This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without expressed written permission from The Way Forward, LLC. The purpose of this presentation is to convey information. It is not intended to diagnose, treat or cure a condition; nor is it to be considered medical or legal advice, opinion or recommendation. This information is presented in the spirit of service for all.
Our episode 100 journey finally comes to an end as the Dapplers take on the threats outside the Wereldal in some mechanized personel carriers. We encourage you to check out our Patreon and/or Ko-Fi, as they've got sweet sweet benefits and also you can help us get to our goals--we're making great progress towards full episode transcripts! AND Our Store is a thing, with all your t-shirts, tote bags, stickers and more! Background music and sound effects: Space Game MC Lars https://patreon.com/mclars 60s Computer Lab, Starship Adrift, Drama, Fray and Tension Tabletop Audio https://tabletopaudio.com Unbreakable (remastered), and Cyber Rock (remastered) Andrew Sitkov Email us at PodAgainsttheMachine@gmail.com Remember to check out https://podagainstthemachine.com for show transcripts, player biographies, and more. Stop by our Discord server to talk about the show: https://discord.gg/TVv9xnqbeW Follow @podvsmachine on Twitter Find us on Reddit, Instagram, and Facebook as well.
As they recap season 3 episode 11 of PLL "Single Freight Female" Hayley and Ashley shake their dang heads at the cruelty of Alison Flop Di Laurentis and at Aria breaking into a school that she does not attend. Although there's a lot of incredulousness in this episode, the girls also cheer for #SnakeGate and are THRILLED to be in THE Computer Lab.
In this episode I provide some suggestions for setting up your computer lab and talk about their impacts on teaching and learning computer science.Click here for this episode's show notes.How to support the free content I create.━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 00:00 Intro00:04 Rows01:46 Stations/pods03:41 Racetrack05:36 Donut07:42 Questions to think through for setting up your room08:00 Outro
Full transcription available at http://heartsofgoldpodcast.com/ Mehaa created a computer lab for the village of Kampot in Cambodia. More about Mehaa: Mehaa Raja is a freshman at UC Berkeley, studying Mechanical Engineering. She started Girl Scouts in 4th grade as a junior, and graduated as a Senior Ambassador. Over the span of almost a decade in Girl Scouts Mehaa took part in various community service projects with her troop, to name a few; annual canned food drives, making blankets for animal shelters, and making goodie bags for the local Women's shelter. Girl Scouts also engulfed her with special memories such as the annual sleepover at the local baseball field, Twilight Camp, and the local Winter Parade. Aside from Girl Scouts, Mehaa enjoys dancing with her sister and trying out new recipes in the kitchen. Instagram @mehaa.raja Share this show with your friends on Twitter. Click to have an editable already written tweet! https://ctt.ac/33zKe Join our Facebook Community https://www.facebook.com/sherylmrobinson/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sherylmrobinson/?hl=en Please subscribe to Hearts of Gold on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/sherylmrobinson or on your favorite podcast app. Support future Hearts of Gold episodes at https://www.patreon.com/heartsofgold Editing by https://www.offthewalter.com/ Walter's YouTube channel is https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt0wFZRVaOpUd_nXc_8-4yQ
At long last, the battle against Dr. Retval begins. Who will win? Who will lose? Who will touch the big shiny crystal? Fin gives orders, Malachi slows down, and Regin has an unexpected reunion. Support the show and get bonus content at patreon.com/shipoffools! Music: 60s Computer Lab, by Tabletop Audio (tabletopaudio.com) Base Assault, by Tabletop Audio (tabletopaudio.com) Dark Magic Cast Loop, by EminYILDIRIM (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) "Medusa" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Titan Revenge, by David Fesliyan (fesliyanstudios.com) Lovers, by David Fesliyan (Fesliyanstudios.com) Sound Effects: Electric Zap - Electricity by Wakerone (freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Thunder Sound FX, by Grant Evans (soundbible.com, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Organic Water Movement, by alexkandrell (freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Heartbeat, Regular, Single, 01-01, LOOP, by InspectorJ (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) Open Ocean, by Tabletop Audio (Tabletopaudio.com) THE CRASH, by sandyrb (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) Glass shard tinkle texture, by el-bee (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) Harpies' Nest, by Tabletop Audio (Tabletopaudio.com)
The boys begin their assault on the drill and fight their way through its protectors. But this mission is about more than just sabotage. This is personal. Fin remembers some items, Regin spreads his wings, and Malachi finds something cool. Support the show and get bonus content at patreon.com/shipoffools! Music: Ship of Fools Theme, by Lucas Mangold Pit Fighter, by Tabletop Audio (tabletopaudio.com) Orbital Prison Break, by Tabletop Audio (tabletopaudio.com) Ethereal Plane, by Tabletop Audio (tabletopaudio.com) 60s Computer Lab, by Tableto Audio (tabletopaudio.com) Sound Effects: Snapping_Shrimp_Slowed_32X, by digifishmusic (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) punching metal door, by MAJ061785 (freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Electric Zap - Electricity by Wakerone (freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Alarm Siren, by mirkosukovic (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) Glass Smash, Bottle, H, by InspectorJ (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License) water baltic sea foley water run in fast splashes heavy mono, by Soundholder (freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License) Victorian Steampunk Music 1, by humanoide9000 (Freesound.org, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License)
Wie in jedem Jahr haben wir Euch gefragt, was ihr schon immer gerne von euch wissen wolltet – es ist Zeit für die neue „Ask Us Anything“-Episode!Hinweis: Dies ist keine reguläre Folge. Für eine richtige Hörspiel-Folge springe z.B. zu Staffel 14 Folge 01!Outro:Happy Christmas Inspiring by WinnieTheMoogLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/7179-happy-christmas-inspiringLicense: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSprecherin des Outros: Carolin SabathSound- & Musikquellen:"60s Computer Lab" by tabletopaudio.com"Aftermath" by tabletopaudio.comAll sounds from tabletopaudio.com are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.
Special guest: Andrea from Peter White Public Library | patreon.com/hbdpod
Der Frontsänger und Gitarrist von FIRST CONTACT segelt, getroffen von einem wuchtig geschleuderten Amp, in hohem Bogen vom Bus – und verschwindet aus dem Blickfeld seiner Bandkollegen. Was wird bloß aus ihm werden?Du hörst die Kerkerkumpels, das Pen & Paper Hörspiel. Die Geschichte, die du hörst, ist live improvisiert. Ob unseren Charakteren eine Aktion gelingt, entscheiden die Würfel!Intro/Outro:Gearhead by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/3799-gearheadLicense: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSprecherin des Intros/Outros: Carolin SabathSound- & Musikquellen:Bittersweet by Kevin MacleodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/3440-bittersweetLicense: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license"60s Computer Lab" by tabletopaudio.com"Dome City Center" by tabletopaudio.com"Endgame" by tabletopaudio.com"Highway" by tabletopaudio.com"Starship Medical" by tabletopaudio.comAll sounds from tabletopaudio.com are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.
This episode is about the early 1980's Junior High computer lab. A wonderous place where Bank Street Writer and Sands of Egypt were loaded from 5 1/4 inch floppy disks, LOGO and BASIC were viable programming options, and where kids like us could find a place of our own. The story this time is about the computer lab, and also about how sometimes you don't understand the affect teachers have on your life until decades later. Recorded, Mixed, Edited and Produced by Steve And Jeff Fulton Music : Everything Has Energy - Tony Longworth : support Tony's Patreon music https://www.patreon.com/tonylongworth Theme by Brian TravisTitle: Into The Vertical Blank theme Words & music by Brian Travis (c)(p)2021 Taste This Moment Music ASCAP http://www.briantravisband.com/ Find us here: http://intotheverticalblank.com FB: https://www.facebook.com/intotheverticalblank Twitter: https://twitter.com/Atari_VB_Pod
This episode is about the early 1980's Junior High computer lab. A wonderous place where Bank Street Writer and Sands of Egypt were loaded from 5 1/4 inch floppy disks, LOGO and BASIC were viable programming options, and where kids like us could find a place of our own. The story this time is about the computer lab, and also about how sometimes you don't understand the affect teachers have on your life until decades later. Recorded, Mixed, Edited and Produced by Steve And Jeff Fulton Music : Everything Has Energy - Tony Longworth : support Tony's Patreon music https://www.patreon.com/tonylongworth Theme by Brian TravisTitle: Into The Vertical Blank theme Words & music by Brian Travis (c)(p)2021 Taste This Moment Music ASCAP http://www.briantravisband.com/ Find us here: http://intotheverticalblank.com FB: https://www.facebook.com/intotheverticalblank Twitter: https://twitter.com/Atari_VB_Pod
One of the many awesome things about being a Xennial is that we grew up during a perfect time period in which many technological advances were first becoming available to the public and computers were definitely the biggest part of this tech revolution! In this episode of It Came From the 80s, Jay and Tony dive deep into the world of computers in the 1980s. Join the boys as they give a history lesson on computers, and also, relive what it was like back in the day to walk into a “Computer Lab” in school, put in a Floppy Disk of “Oregon Trail”, or “Where in the World is Carmen San Diego” and become transfixed by something that no generation before them had experienced. The guys also talk about their first household computers, how it was first connecting to the internet, printing on dot matrix printers, connecting with people via AOL Instant Messenger, how much life has changed with respect to using computers, and so much more! IG : https://www.instagram.com/camefromthe80s/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CameFromThe80s Email: camefromthe80s@gmail.com
Well, the bummer news from last week's show gets a lot heavier... but just like last week, it quickly becomes a shit show because laughing always helps during tough times! Let's talk about that, having litter boxes in schools, accidentally buying your old roller skates from decades ago, looking up porn in the computer lab, and more on today's episode of Can You Don't?!*** Wanna become part of The Gaggle?! Our Patreon page is LIVE! This is the biggest way you can support the show. It would mean the world to us: http://patreon.com/canyoudontpodcast ***New Episodes every Wednesday at 12pm PSTWatch on Youtube: https://youtu.be/yl5CpT07vFQSend in segment content: heyguys@canyoudontpodcast.comMerch: http://canyoudontpodcast.comMerch Inquires: store@canyoudontpodcast.comFB: http://facebook.com/canyoudontpodcastIG: http://instagram.com/canyoudontpodcastYouTube Channel: https://bit.ly/3wyt5rtOfficial Website: http://canyoudontpodcast.comCustom Music Beds by Zach CohenFan Mail:Can You Don't?PO Box 1062Coeur d'Alene, ID 83816Hugs and tugs :)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Previously, Jackie Cham the Pancham landed first place in the Crimini City Normal Rank Tough Contest and Diablo the Vapor Charmander got a respectable second place in his Cool Contest debut! Now that Pearl has gotten her fill of contest shenanigans, it's time to finally leave the City with Crime in the Name! What errands do our heroes need to run before hitting the road? What friends will they have one last reunion with? And why is Diablo glowing?? GM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land Pokénerd Scott - Variations in the Vapors, Absolutely NASTY, Where There's Smoke… https://mobile.twitter.com/Garbomania GlitchxCity - Pokemon Diamond and Pearl Pokémon League Lo-Fi Remix, Pokémon Center Theme Lo-fi Lullaby Remix https://www.youtube.com/user/GlitchxCity Zame - Johto PokéMart Remastered, Floaroma Town Night Remastered https://www.youtube.com/user/ZameJack Mikel & GameChops - Route 3, Pokémon League, Sacred Beasts https://music.gamechops.com/album/pok-chill ProtoDome - On the Origin of Species Ectogemia - Half Steps ~Espeon~ Fluidvolt - Doggy Goes Mu TabletopAudio.com - Lucha Libre, Royal Salon, Secret Garden, Lively Café, 60's Computer Lab, Secret Facility, City and the City, Barren Wastes
Last time, Pearl and Luca went to investigate the mysterious Team Smoke Lab. With the help of their adult allies, they managed to piece together more clues about what Team Smoke has been up to, and get their hands on some fancy new tech. But it's getting late and Pearl is getting loopy, so it looks like it's time for bed! But in the morning... it's time for post-gym shopping! Where will the team go to get fabulous prizes? Will there be pizza involved? How much of sugar-rush Pearl can the grown-ups handle?? GM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land Braxton Burks & Materia Collective - A Tale of Three Beasts pt. II https://www.materiacollective.com/artist/braxton-burks Mikel & GameChops - Route 3, National Park, Pokémon Gym https://music.gamechops.com/album/pok-chill Zame - Johto PokéMart Remastered https://www.youtube.com/user/ZameJack GlitchxCity - Snap!, Bongo Cat's PokéMart, An Animal Crossing Song, Star Seeker https://www.youtube.com/user/GlitchxCity Insaneintherainmusic - Treasure Town https://www.insaneintherainmusic.com/albums Rossini - William Tell Overture Josef Bel Habib - Gotta Catch That Unicorn Lexica - Tiger Tracks Osoku - Arcade Andreas Dahlback - TheForceOfOneLMTD Roy Edwin Williams - Oscar the Outlaw Joseph Cash - Rubber Duck Samba TabletopAudio.com - Robotics Lab, 60s Computer Lab, 1940s Boardwalk, Shopping Mall, Lively Café
Previously, our heroes dealt with some of the aftermath of The Big Snag. After a debrief at Dedenny's, Pearl and Luca (along with Detective Reynolds, Louis, and Professor Nichols) are going to take a closer look at the Team Smoke Lab. What other strange experiments have they been working on? What do they hope to achieve? And will there be shenanigans to lighten the mood?? GM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land, 80s Vibe, Haunted Blues, Ocean Drift Braxton Burks & Materia Collective - Pokémon Mansion, Shelf of Memories, Oak Research Lab, A Morning in New Bark Town https://www.materiacollective.com/artist/braxton-burks Mikel & GameChops - Sacred Beasts https://music.gamechops.com/album/pok-chill PokéNerd Scott - Variations in the Vapors (a custom Team Smoke-inspired track) Joseph Cash - Pool Noodle Samba TabletopAudio.com - City and the City, Noir Procedural, Secret Facility, 60s Computer Lab, Robotics Lab, Sewers
Link To Article: https://bit.ly/3mXIlKIThe Oregon Trail was created in 1971 by three student teachers at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota,[1] in the HP Time-Shared BASIC environment running on an HP-2100 minicomputer.[2] One of these students, senior Don Rawitsch, had the idea to create a computer program for a history class he was teaching, and recruited two of his friends, Paul Dillenberger and Bill Heinemann, both of whom were students teaching math, to help.The Oregon Trail debuted to Rawitsch's class on 3 December 1971. Despite bugs, the game was immediately popular, and he made it available to others on Minneapolis Public Schools' time-sharing service. When the next semester ended, however, Rawitsch deleted the program, although he printed out a copy of the source code.In 1974 Rawitsch took a job at Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium, or MECC, a state-funded organization that developed educational software for the classroom. He added many historically accurate features and uploaded The Oregon Trail into the organization's time-sharing network, where it could be accessed by schools across Minnesota. The game became one of the network's most popular programs, with thousands of players monthly.Support the show (https://bit.ly/2XdAlJC)
Previously, Detective Reynolds spent the night sneaking around the city's shady underbelly with Louis as they searched for more intel about what is being planned for the Fighting Tournament as well as clues to Sully's whereabouts. After calling in some reinforcements, they find themselves back in the Noibatcave ready for an early morning meeting. What will our heroes plan to stop the dastardly deeds already set in motion? Will the children be able to hold their own in the Fighting Tournament? And will Pearl please get out of bed so that this meeting can get started?? GM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land Insaneintherainmusic - Golden Battle, Rise to the Challenge, Gladion's Groove, Stupid Blues, Oriental Hues https://www.insaneintherainmusic.com/albums Braxton Burks & Materia Collective - Trouble at Slowpoke Well, Whirl Islands (Surf Theme) https://www.materiacollective.com/artist/braxton-burks Zame - Pokémon Gym https://www.youtube.com/user/ZameJack Mikel & GameChops - Pokémon Gym https://music.gamechops.com/album/pok-chill Aaron Kenny - The Black Cat Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen - Covert Affairs Farrell Wooten - Claustrophonic Walt Adams - Pembroke Pines TabletopAudio.com - Secret Facility, 60s Computer Lab, Noir Procedural, Sewers, Dome City Center, Lucha Libre
Previously, Luca and Sully went to the Crimini City Gym to sign Luca up for the Fighting Tournament and gather information. After checking into a hotel room, Sully decided to stay behind and attempt to establish herself as a double agent. As night comes, Pearl and Luca may be getting ready to settle in, but Detective Reynolds won't be getting much sleep tonight. What will Reynolds discover as he explores beneath the city streets? Will he find out what Sully has been up to this afternoon? And will Reynolds and Louis ever get to just hang out?? DM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land Insaneintherainmusic - Pokémon League (Day), Galactic Eterna Building https://www.insaneintherainmusic.com/albums Braxton Burks & Materia Collective - Team Rocket Hideout, The Red Chain https://www.materiacollective.com/artist/braxton-burks Zame - Looker's Theme Remastered https://www.youtube.com/user/ZameJack Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen - The Detective, Mitch the Snitch Aaron Kenny - The Black Cat Farrell Wooten - The Tall Man More than Family - Young Detective White Drift - Operator Got Jax - Radio Graffiti Dream Cave - First on the Scene TabletopAudio.com - Secret Facility, Lively Café, Dome City Center, Candledeep, Shopping Mall, 60s Computer Lab, Noir Procedural
Pearl, Luca, and Sully's arrival into Crimini City was not as friendly as they'd hoped it would be. Immediately after entering the city limits, they were accosted by members of Team Nasty and Ringo got away! At least, they thought he did! But now, with a new unlikely ally on the inside and old allies reconnecting, our heroes are gearing up for whatever is happening at the Fighting Tournament. Where in Crimini City could Detective Reynolds have found a safe place to stay? Is Professor Nichols doing alright? And how long can Sarah and Jonah discuss musical theatre in one episode?? DM: Jonah M. Jackson Pearl: Sarah Katherine Zanotti Music: FoolBoyMedia - Video Game Land Insaneintherainmusic - Pokémon Center (Night), Veilstone City, Galactic Eterna Building, Sandgem Town https://www.insaneintherainmusic.com/albums Mikel & GameChops - Azalea Town https://music.gamechops.com/album/pok-chill Darren Ang - Eterna City https://www.darrenangvgm.com/ Schtiffles - Lucky Coin Dream Cave - Dead Alley, Private Firm Sixteen Wheelers - Late Night Session Gabriel Lewis - The Foreshadowing TabletopAudio.com - Victorian London, Cyberpunk City, City and the City, Warehouse 13, Secret Facility, 60s Computer Lab, Noir Procedural, Dome City Center
MULTO SA COMPUTER LAB | Sindak Short Stories | Philippine True Ghost Stories | HILAKBOT TV The Podcast SEND YOUR STORIES TO sindakstories2008@gmail.com FOLLOW OUR 2ND PODCAST - PINOY HORROR RADIO (HTVSindak) FOR NEW STORIES SUBSCRIBE TO HILAKBOT TV ON YOU TUBE SUBSCRIBE TO SINDAK SHORT STORIES ON YOU TUBE SUBSCRIBE TO HILAKBOT HAUNTED HISTORY ON YOU TUBE #hilakbottv #hilakbotpinoyhorrorstories #htv #hilakbotlatestepisode #kwentongkatatakutantagalog #pinoycreepypastastories #tagalogcreepypastastories #kwentongkatatakutantagalog #pinoyhorrorstories #tagaloghorrorstories #tagaloghorroraudiobook --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hilakbot-tv/message
Today on Lifestyles, it's all about Learn with Me, an educational collaboration with the San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools and KVCR. Learn with Me features two programs aimed at students from Kindergarten through second grade- Room 57 and Computer Lab 11 . Both shows were produced in the KVCR studio with KVCR staff on the crew. Lillian speaks to Dr. Stephanie Houston, Assistant Superintendent of Innovation & Engagement Branch of San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools, about the overall project and vision. Then Lillian speaks to the host of Room 57 , Sommer Mendoza, a former Kindergarten teacher and now instructional coach for the Fontana Unified School District. Lillian also has a conversation with the hosts of Computer Lab 11 : Third-grade teacher Lindsay Munoz and District Technology Coach Darren Alcala, both with the Cucamonga School District. Learn with Me will air on KVCR-TV in the coming weeks.
This week on Mom Notes we sit down with Mary Hannah. She talks with us about homeschooling, parenting, and helping her husband with their music ministry at their church. Our director's note this week is a game you can play with your music students in person or virtually. We ask for mom notes about your experiences outside of public education with homeschooling or private schools. The clip of Mary Hannah singing is from the oratorio "Elijah" by Felix Mendelssohn. Email us your mom notes at momnotespod@gmail.com! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Die Crew der Black Mantis beginnt langsam zu verstehen, wie alle Dinge zusammenhängen, und macht sich für einen letzten Gesprächsversuch auf zu einem skurrilen Planeten. Du hörst die Kerkerkumpels, einen Pen & Paper Podcast. Die Geschichte, die du hörst, ist live improvisiert und ungeschnitten. Nur Soundeffekte wurden im Anschluss hinzugefügt, um ein immersives Hörspielerlebnis zu erschaffen. Sound- & Musikquellen: Agnus Dei X by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/3344-agnus-dei-xLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ “Endless Voyage” by www.tabletopaudio.com“Dark Matter” by www.tabletopaudio.com“Forbidden Galaxy” by www.tabletopaudio.com“Lively Café” by www.tabletopaudio.com“Star Freighter” by www.tabletopaudio.com“Cyberpunk City” by www.tabletopaudio.com“60s Computer Lab” by www.tabletopaudio.com All sounds from www.tabletopaudio.com are licensed unser Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Unsere drei zwergischen Helden werden Zeugen eines Ereignisses, das sich so noch niemals zugetragen hat. Eine erstaunliche Querverbindung tut sich auf. Du hörst die Kerkerkumpels, einen Pen & Paper Podcast. Die Geschichte, die du hörst, ist live improvisiert und ungeschnitten. Nur Soundeffekte wurden im Anschluss hinzugefügt, um ein immersives Hörspielerlebnis zu erschaffen. Sound- & Musikquellen: Agnus Dei X by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ “Temple of Helm” from tabletopaudio.com“Castle Jail” by Pavel Filimonov from tabletopaudio.com“Cry Havoc” from tabletopaudio.com“Temple Garden” from tabletopaudio.com“60s Computer Lab” from tabletopaudio.com All sounds from www.tabletopaudio.com are licensed unser Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Mambo vipi, kwenye toleo hili nimezungumza na Billy Patrick yeye amehudumu kama Google Developer Student Club Lead katika chuo cha Uhasibu Arusha (IAA). Nilipenda kufahamu mchakato mzima wa kuomba nafasi hiyo, ushirikiano aliopata kwa uongozi wa chuo na wanafunzi, na vipi kuhusu changamoto alizopitia.Billy amenieleza Google Developer Student Club ni nini, namna inavyofanya kazi pia namna ya kufanya applicaion. Walengwa wa Google Developer Student Club ni kina nani.Billy amenijulisha kwa mwaka 2019/2020 ni chuo cha Uhasibu Arusha pekee hapa Tanzania ndio kilikuwa na Google Developer Student Club. Hii inafanya Billy yeye kuwa Google Developer Student Club Lead wa kwanza kwa vyuo hapa Tanzania.Billy ameniambia, kwa mwaka 2020/2021 kuna vyuo vitano, nadhani haya ni maendeleo makubwa katika kujenga developers wa kiwango hapa Tanzania.Billy amenieleza alipata ushirikiano wakutosha kwenye chuo cha Uhasibu Arusha, big shout out kwa chuo cha Uhasibu Arusha kwa support kubwa hii maana waliweza toa hata Computer Lab kwa Google Developer Student Club.Billy ameniambia mengi ikiwa ni pamoja na majukumu sasa ya Google Developer Student Club Lead na pia changamoto walizopitia. Pia amenipa faida alizopata katika kipindi chake alichohudumu kama Lead, na nini atafanya sasa baada ya kumaliza muda wake.Ninahamasika vya kutoka na hamasa aliyotupa Billy, nimefurahishwa na namba ya vyuo vingine kuongezeka kujiunga na Google Developer Student Club. Vilevile hamasa ametoa kwa vyuo vingine kuweza support jitahada kama hizi kuweza andaa developers kwa kuweza jifunza Technolojia mbalimbali. Fuatilia sasa uweze kusikiliza haya na mengine mengi kutoka kwa Billy.
Fill in the blank: "You know you went to grade school in the early 2000s when...". In this throwback "Back To School" special we go back to simpler times of overhead projectors and rainy day schedules. Join us as we share our best memories from the turn of the century and the peak of our childhoods! Follow Razzed:Instagram & Twitter- @RazzedPodcastFollow Razmik:Instagram & Twitter- @Raz_CanasContact:RazzedPodcast@gmail.comLogo & Branding by Elisa Villanueva - Instagram: @e.vill_designsMusic:Track: Play — Declan DP [Audio Library Release]Music provided by Audio Library PlusWatch: https://youtu.be/uEQ70lCZuecFree Download / Stream: https://alplus.io/playSound Effects: Mike Koenig
Q & A Presents: Maui Online! – Hawaii's Only Computer Talk Show!
Continuing on with our home schooling and computers! Distance Learning Peripherals You can find computers, printer/scanners, and more at our friendly local OfficeMax/OfficeDepot! Be sure to tell them that Q&A sent you!
Q & A Presents: Maui Online! – Hawaii's Only Computer Talk Show!
Do you have kids of school age? Distance Learning! Are you going to be home schooling? Well, time to set up a home computing environment and we’re here to help! Setting up Windows 10 Parental Controls: https://www.lifewire.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-parental-controls-4801595 Netgear parental controls: https://www.netgear.com/home/discover/apps/lpc.aspx Linksys parental controls: https://www.linksys.com/us/support-article?articleNum=134633 How to use Zoom: https://www.businessinsider.com/how-to-use-zoom
This episode is an arbitrary update where I talk about whatever is on my mind. After putting if off over a year I recently built a new computer to help with video streaming & editing. I also have started fresh with my Lab environment adding my old desktop to it. I’ve spent the last few … Continue reading "SAS 033 – Arbitrary Update – New Computer, Lab Rebuild & PowerShell Automation"
Different activities I've been working on like looking for certifications for students and improving the Computer Lab.
Teen who burned SLO High's Computer Lab back In Court. Texas Pipeline Sentenced For Spill. Santa Maria Strawberry Festival Opens Today.
Trip reports from the Essen Hackathon and BSDCam, CfT: ZFS native encryption and UFS trim consolidation, ZFS performance benchmarks on a FreeBSD server, how to port your OS to EC2, Vint Cerf about traceability, Remote Access console to an RPi3 running FreeBSD, and more. ##Headlines Essen Hackathon & BSDCam 2018 trip report Allan and Benedict met at FRA airport and then headed to the Air Rail terminal for our train to Essen where the Hackathon would happen over the weekend of Aug 10 - 12, 2018. Once there, we did not have to wait long until other early-arrivals would show up and soon we had about 10 people gathered for lunch. After buying some take-out pizzas and bringing it back to the Linuxhotel (there was a training still going on there so we could not get into our rooms yet), we sat in the sunny park and talked. More and more people arrived and soon, people started hacking on their laptops. Some people would not arrive until a few hours before midnight, but we already had a record appearance of 20 people in total. On Saturday, we gathered everyone in one of the seminar rooms that had rooms and chairs for us. After some organizational infos, we did an introductory round and Benedict wrote down on the whiteboard what people were interested in. It was not long until groups formed to talk about SSL in base, weird ZFS scrubs that would go over 100% completion (fixed now). Other people started working on ports, fixing bugs, or wrote documentation. The day ended in a BBQ in the Linuxhotel park, which was well received by everyone. On Sunday, after attendees packed up their luggage and stored it in the seminar room, we continued hacking until lunchtime. After a quick group picture, we headed to a local restaurant for the social event (which was not open on Saturday, otherwise we would have had it then). In the afternoon, most people departed, a good half of them were heading for BSDCam. Commits from the hackathon (the ones from 2018) Overall, the hackathon was well received by attendees and a lot of them liked the fact that it was close to another BSD gathering so they could nicely combine the two. Also, people thought about doing their own hackathon in the future, which is an exciting prospect. Thanks to all who attended, helped out here and there when needed. Special Thanks to Netzkommune GmbH for sponsoring the social event and the Linuxhotel for having us. Benedict was having a regular work day on Monday after coming back from the hackathon, but flew out to Heathrow on Tuesday. Allan was in London a day earlier and arrived a couple of hours before Benedict in Cambridge. He headed for the Computer Lab even though the main event would not start until Wednesday. Most people gathered at the Maypole pub on Tuesday evening for welcomes, food and drinks. On Wednesday, a lot of people met in the breakfast room of Churchill College where most people were staying and went to the Computer Lab, which served as the main venue for BSDCam, together. The morning was spend with introductions and collecting what most people were interested in talking. This unconference style has worked well in the past and soon we had 10 main sessions together for the rest of this and the following two days (full schedule). Most sessions took notes, which you can find on the FreeBSD wiki. On Thursday evening, we had a nice formal dinner at Trinity Hall. BSDCam 2018 was a great success with a lot of fruitful discussions and planning sessions. We thank the organizers for BSDCam for making it happen. A special mentions goes out to Robert Watson and his family. Even though he was not there, he had a good reason to miss it: they had their first child born at the beginning of the week. Congratulations and best wishes to all three of them! ###Call for Testing: ZFS Native Encryption for FreeBSD A port of the ZoL (ZFS-on-Linux) feature that provides native crypto support for ZFS is ready for testing on FreeBSD Most of the porting was done by sef@freebsd.org (Sean Eric Fagan) The original ZoL commit is here: https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/5769/commits/5aef9bedc801830264428c64cd2242d1b786fd49 For an overview, see Tom Caputi’s presentation from the OpenZFS Developers Summit in 2016 Video: https://youtu.be/frnLiXclAMo Slides: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5hUzsxe4cdmU3ZTRXNxa2JIaDQ/view?usp=sharing WARNING: test in VMs or with spare disks etc, pools created with this code, or upgraded to this version, will no longer be importable on systems that do not support this feature. The on-disk format or other things may change before the final version, so you will likely have to ‘zfs send | zfs recv’ the data on to a new pool Thanks for testing to help this feature land in FreeBSD iXsystems ###Call for Testing: UFS TRIM Consolidation Kirk Mckusick posts to the FreeBSD mailing list looking for testers for the new UFS TRIM Consolidation code When deleting files on filesystems that are stored on flash-memory (solid-state) disk drives, the filesystem notifies the underlying disk of the blocks that it is no longer using. The notification allows the drive to avoid saving these blocks when it needs to flash (zero out) one of its flash pages. These notifications of no-longer-being-used blocks are referred to as TRIM notifications. In FreeBSD these TRIM notifications are sent from the filesystem to the drive using the BIODELETE command. Until now, the filesystem would send a separate message to the drive for each block of the file that was deleted. Each Gigabyte of file size resulted in over 3000 TRIM messages being sent to the drive. This burst of messages can overwhelm the drive’s task queue causing multiple second delays for read and write requests. This implementation collects runs of contiguous blocks in the file and then consolodates them into a single BIODELETE command to the drive. The BIODELETE command describes the run of blocks as a single large block being deleted. Each Gigabyte of file size can result in as few as two BIODELETE commands and is typically less than ten. Though these larger BIODELETE commands take longer to run, they do not clog the drive task queue, so read and write commands can intersperse effectively with them. Though this new feature has been throughly reviewed and tested, it is being added disabled by default so as to minimize the possibility of disrupting the upcoming 12.0 release. It can be enabled by running `sysctl vfs.ffs.dotrimcons=1’’. Users are encouraged to test it. If no problems arise, we will consider requesting that it be enabled by default for 12.0. This support is off by default, but I am hoping that I can get enough testing to ensure that it (a) works, and (b) is helpful that it will be reasonable to have it turned on by default in 12.0. The cutoff for turning it on by default in 12.0 is September 19th. So I am requesting your testing feedback in the near-term. Please let me know if you have managed to use it successfully (or not) and also if it provided any performance difference (good or bad). To enable TRIM consolidation usesysctl vfs.ffs.dotrimcons=1’ There is also a diff that adds additional statistics: https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2018-August/070798.html You can also watch the volume and latency of BIODELETE commands by running gstat with the -d flag ##News Roundup ZFS performance Aravindh Sampathkumar, a Performance Engineer and Sysadmin posts some simple benchmarks he did on a new ZFS server This is NOT an all-in post about ZFS performance. I built a FreeBSD+ZFS file server recently at work to serve as an offsite backup server. I wanted to run a few synthetic workloads on it and look at how it fares from performance perspective. Mostly for curiosity and learning purposes. As stated in the notes about building this server, performance was not one of the priorities, as this server will never face our active workload. What I care about from this server is its ability to work with rsync and keep the data synchronised with our primary storage server. With that context, I ran a few write tests to see how good our solution is and what to expect from it in terms of performance. The article then uses FIO to do some benchmarks. As the author did, make sure you match the FIO block size to the ZFS record size to avoid write amplification. Either tune FIO or adjust the recordsize property in ZFS You also want to consider compression and cache effects Write Performance: Incompressible: 1600-2600 MB/s, Compressible: 2500-6600 MB/s Another over 1200 MB/s is enough to keep your 10 gigabit network saturated The increased latency that is seen with higher number of writers working, may be the result of the ZFS backpressure system (the write throttle). There is some tuning that can be done there. Specifically, since this machine has 768 GB of ram, you might allow more than 4GB of dirty data, which would mean you’d be able to write larger batches and not have to push back while you wait for a transaction group to flush when dealing with gigabytes/sec of writes ###How to port your OS to EC2 Colin Percival reflects on his FreeBSD on EC2 maintainership efforts in his blog: I’ve been the maintainer of the FreeBSD/EC2 platform for about 7.5 years now, and as far as “running things in virtual machines” goes, that remains the only operating system and the only cloud which I work on. That said, from time to time I get questions from people who want to port other operating systems into EC2, and being a member of the open source community, I do my best to help them. I realized a few days ago that rather than replying to emails one by one it would be more efficient to post something publicly; so — for the benefit of the dozen or so people who want to port operating systems to run in EC2, and the curiosity of maybe a thousand more people who use EC2 but will never build AMIs themselves — here’s a rough guide to building EC2 images. Before we can talk about building images, there are some things you need: Your OS needs to run on x86 hardware. 64-bit (“amd64”, “x86-64”) is ideal, but I’ve managed to run 32-bit FreeBSD on “64-bit” EC2 instances so at least in some cases that’s not strictly necessary. You almost certainly want to have drivers for Xen block devices (for all of the pre-Nitro EC2 instances) or for NVMe disks (for the most recent EC2 instances). Theoretically you could make do without these since there’s some ATA emulation available for bootstrapping, but if you want to do any disk I/O after the kernel finishes booting you’ll want to have a disk driver. Similarly, you need support for the Xen network interface (older instances), Intel 10 GbE SR-IOV networking (some newer but pre-Nitro instances), or Amazon’s “ENA” network adapters (on Nitro instances), unless you plan on having instances which don’t communicate over the network. The ENA driver is probably the hardest thing to port, since as far as I know there’s no way to get your hands on the hardware directly, and it’s very difficult to do any debugging in EC2 without having a working network. Finally, the obvious: You need to have an AWS account, and appropriate API access keys. Building a disk image Building an AMI I wrote a simple tool for converting disk images into EC2 instances: bsdec2-image-upload. It uploads a disk image to Amazon S3; makes an API call to import that disk image into an EBS volume; creates a snapshot of that volume; then registers an EC2 AMI using that snapshot. To use bsdec2-image-upload, you’ll first need to create an S3 bucket for it to use as a staging area. You can call it anything you like, but I recommend that you Create it in a “nearby” region (for performance reasons), and Set an S3 “lifecycle policy” which deletes objects automatically after 1 day (since bsdec2-image-upload doesn’t clean up the S3 bucket, and those objects are useless once you’ve finished creating an AMI). Boot configuration Odds are that your instance started booting and got as far as the boot loader launching the kernel, but at some point after that things went sideways. Now we start the iterative process of building disk images, turning them into AMIs, launching said AMIs, and seeing where they break. Some things you’ll probably run into here: EC2 instances have two types of console available to them: A serial console and an VGA console. (Or rather, emulated serial and emulated VGA.) If you can have your kernel output go to both consoles, I recommend doing that. If you have to pick one, the serial console (which shows up as the “System Log” in EC2) is probably more useful than the VGA console (which shows up as “instance screenshot”) since it lets you see more than one screen of logs at once; but there’s a catch: Due to some bizarre breakage in EC2 — which I’ve been complaining about for ten years — the serial console is very “laggy”. If you find that you’re not getting any output, wait five minutes and try again. You may need to tell your kernel where to find the root filesystem. On FreeBSD we build our disk images using GPT labels, so we simply need to specify in /etc/fstab that the root filesystem is on /dev/gpt/rootfs; but if you can’t do this, you’ll probably need to have different AMIs for Nitro instances vs. non-Nitro instances since Xen block devices will typically show up with different device names from NVMe disks. On FreeBSD, I also needed to set the vfs.root.mountfrom kernel environment variable for a while; this also is no longer needed on FreeBSD but something similar may be needed on other systems. You’ll need to enable networking, using DHCP. On FreeBSD, this means placing ifconfigDEFAULT=“SYNCDHCP” into /etc/rc.conf; other systems will have other ways of specifying network parameters, and it may be necessary to specify a setting for the Xen network device, Intel SR-IOV network, and the Amazon ENA interface so that you’ll have the necessary configuration across all EC2 instance types. (On FreeBSD, ifconfigDEFAULT takes care of specifying the network settings which should apply for whatever network interface the kernel finds at boot time.) You’ll almost certainly want to turn on SSH, so that you can connect into newly launched instances and make use of them. Don’t worry about setting a password or creating a user to SSH into yet — we’ll take care of that later. EC2 configuration Now it’s time to make the AMI behave like an EC2 instance. To this end, I prepared a set of rc.d scripts for FreeBSD. Most importantly, they Print the SSH host keys to the console, so that you can veriy that they are correct when you first SSH in. (Remember, Verifying SSH host keys is more important than flossing every day.) Download the SSH public key you want to use for logging in, and create an account (by default, “ec2-user”) with that key set up for you. Fetch EC2 user-data and process it via configinit to allow you to configure the system as part of the process of launching it. If your OS has an rc system derived from NetBSD’s rc.d, you may be able to use these scripts without any changes by simply installing them and enabling them in /etc/rc.conf; otherwise you may need to write your own scripts using mine as a model. Firstboot scripts A feature I added to FreeBSD a few years ago is the concept of “firstboot” scripts: These startup scripts are only run the first time a system boots. The aforementioned configinit and SSH key fetching scripts are flagged this way — so if your OS doesn’t support the “firstboot” keyword on rc.d scripts you’ll need to hack around that — but EC2 instances also ship with other scripts set to run on the first boot: FreeBSD Update will fetch and install security and critical errata updates, and then reboot the system if necessary. The UFS filesystem on the “boot disk” will be automatically expanded to the full size of the disk — this makes it possible to specify a larger size of disk at EC2 instance launch time. Third-party packages will be automatically fetched and installed, according to a list in /etc/rc.conf. This is most useful if configinit is used to edit /etc/rc.conf, since it allows you to specify packages to install via the EC2 user-data. While none of these are strictly necessary, I find them to be extremely useful and highly recommend implementing similar functionality in your systems. Support my work! I hope you find this useful, or at very least interesting. Please consider supporting my work in this area; while I’m happy to contribute my time to supporting open source software, it would be nice if I had money coming in which I could use to cover incidental expenses (e.g., conference travel) so that I didn’t end up paying to contribute to FreeBSD. Digital Ocean https://do.co/bsdnow ###Traceability, by Vint Cerf A recent article from the August issue of the Communications of the ACM, for your contemplation: At a recent workshop on cybersecurity in the U.K., a primary topic of consideration was how to preserve the freedom and openness of the Internet while protecting against the harmful behaviors that have emerged in this global medium. That this is a significant challenge cannot be overstated. The bad behaviors range from social network bullying and misinformation to email spam, distributed denial of service attacks, direct cyberattacks against infrastructure, malware propagation, identity theft, and a host of other ills requiring a wide range of technical and legal considerations. That these harmful behaviors can and do cross international boundaries only makes it more difficult to fashion effective responses. In other columns, I have argued for better software development tools to reduce the common mistakes that lead to vulnerabilities that are exploited. Here, I want to focus on another aspect of response related to law enforcement and tracking down perpetrators. Of course, not all harms are (or perhaps are not yet) illegal, but discovering those who cause them may still be warranted. The recent adoption and implementation of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the European Union creates an interesting tension because it highlights the importance and value of privacy while those who do direct or indirect harm must be tracked down and their identities discovered. In passing, I mention that cryptography has sometimes been blamed for protecting the identity or actions of criminals but it is also a tool for protecting privacy. Arguments have been made for “back doors” to cryptographic systems but I am of the opinion that such proposals carry extremely high risk to privacy and safety. It is not my intent to argue this question in this column. What is of interest to me is a concept to which I was introduced at the Ditchley workshop, specifically, differential traceability. The ability to trace bad actors to bring them to justice seems to me an important goal in a civilized society. The tension with privacy protection leads to the idea that only under appropriate conditions can privacy be violated. By way of example, consider license plates on cars. They are usually arbitrary identifiers and special authority is needed to match them with the car owners (unless, of course, they are vanity plates like mine: “Cerfsup”). This is an example of differential traceability; the police department has the authority to demand ownership information from the Department of Motor Vehicles that issues the license plates. Ordinary citizens do not have this authority. In the Internet environment there are a variety of identifiers associated with users (including corporate users). Domain names, IP addresses, email addresses, and public cryptography keys are examples among many others. Some of these identifiers are dynamic and thus ambiguous. For example, IP addresses are not always permanent and may change (for example, temporary IP addresses assigned at Wi-Fi hotspots) or may be ambiguous in the case of Network Address Translation. Information about the time of assignment and the party to whom an IP address was assigned may be needed to identify an individual user. There has been considerable debate and even a recent court case regarding requirements to register users in domain name WHOIS databases in the context of the adoption of GDPR. If we are to accomplish the simultaneous objectives of protecting privacy while apprehending those engaged in harmful or criminal behavior on the Internet, we must find some balance between conflicting but desirable outcomes. This suggests to me that the notion of traceability under (internationally?) agreed circumstances (that is, differential traceability) might be a fruitful concept to explore. In most societies today, it is accepted that we must be identifiable to appropriate authorities under certain conditions (consider border crossings, traffic violation stops as examples). While there are conditions under which apparent anonymity is desirable and even justifiable (whistle-blowing, for example) absolute anonymity is actually quite difficult to achieve (another point made at the Ditchley workshop) and might not be absolutely desirable given the misbehaviors apparent anonymity invites. I expect this is a controversial conclusion and I look forward to subsequent discussion. ###Remote Access Console using FreeBSD on an RPi3 Our friend, and FOSDEM Booth Neighbour, Jorge, has posted a tutorial on how he created a remote access console for his SmartOS server and other machines in his homelab Parts: Raspberry Pi 3 B+ NavoLabs micro POE Hat FT4232H based USB-to-RS232 (4x) adapter Official Raspberry Pi case (optional) Heat-sink kit (optional) USB-to-TTL adaptor (optional) Sandisk 16Gb microSD For the software I ended up using conserver. Below is a very brief tutorial on how to set everything up. I assume you have basic unix skills. Get an RPi3 image, make some minor modifications for RPi3+, and write it to the USB stick Configure FreeBSD on the RPi3 Load the ‘muge’ Ethernet Driver Load USB serial support Load the FTDI driver Enable SSHd and Conserver Configure Conserver Setup log rotation Start Conserver And you’re good to go A small bonus script I wrote to turn on the 2nd LED on the rPI once the system is booted, it will then blink the LED if someone is connected to any of the consoles. There is also a followup post with some additional tips: https://blackdot.be/2018/08/freebsd-uart-and-raspberry-pi-3-b/ ##Beastie Bits Annual Penguin Races Mscgen - Message Sequence Chart generator This patch makes FreeBSD boot 500 - 800ms faster, please test on your hardware FreeBSD’s arc4random() replaced with OpenBSD ChaCha20 implementation MeetBSD Devsummit open for registrations New Podcast interview with Michael W. Lucas Tarsnap ##Feedback/Questions We need more feedback emails. Please write to feedback@bsdnow.tv Additionally, we are considering a new segment to be added to the end of the show (to make it skippable), where we have a ~15 minute deep dive on a topic. Some initial ideas are on the Virtual Memory subsystem, the Scheduler, Capsicum, and GEOM. What topics would you like to get very detailed explanations of? Many of the explanations may have accompanying graphics, and not be very suitable for audio only listeners, that is why we are planning to put it at the very end of the episode. Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
Classroom management can be a challenge in any classroom. In this episode, I share my secrets and tips for managing my computer lab classroom. I hope it helps.
Teaching Bites 2.0 - We help teachers create a more fulfilling lifestyle.
Fred participated in a world-wide webinar with the Association of Technology Leaders in Independent Schools. With five other cutting edge schools, Fred shares his school's experience on the transformation from the antiquated computer lab model to a more dynamic and hands on learning experience of a flexible maker space studio.
Leveraging the Computer Lab to Prepare Students for Online Assessments. How important is this these days??? Zion IL, Elementary District 6 Director of Instructional Technology, Tony DeMonte. Thank you Learning.Com for finding Tony for me. www.learning.com @learningdotcom
New Computer Lab (photo credit: Terry McCombs http://www.flickr.com/photos/22809952@N03/6293508103/) Lococast Ohio Linuxfest 2011 Inteview: Michael Fischer We have one last interview in the can from Ohio Linuxfest, and it's appropriate that we release this canned interview, since it's with Michael "Call me Fish" Fischer (get it? Canned? Fish? OK, I'll stop now). Fish presented a talk at Ohio Linuxfest entitled: "Managing a Computer Lab in a High School Environment". After the talk, Rick and Fish sat down to talk a bit about computers and education, and why Fish brought some of his students to Ohio Linuxfest. Special thanks to Michael "Call me Fish" Fischer for taking the time to talk with us at Lococast.net. Music: Razza by eluzian from Anima Inquieta Harvey Wallbanger by Alan Marchand from Blues for all Occasions
Lococast Ohio Linuxfest 2011 Inteview: Michael Fischer We have one last interview in the can from Ohio Linuxfest, and it's appropriate that we release this canned interview, since it's with Michael "Call me Fish" Fischer (get it? Canned? Fish? OK, I'll stop now). Fish presented a talk at Ohio Linuxfest entitled: "Managing a Computer Lab […]
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