Podcasts about crashplan

American software company

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Best podcasts about crashplan

Latest podcast episodes about crashplan

VO BOSS Podcast
Tech Secrets for Success

VO BOSS Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2025 24:49


BOSSes Anne Ganguzza and Tom Dheere dive into the essential digital toolkit for today's voiceover professionals. Their lively conversation spotlights practical solutions for safeguarding valuable audio, effortlessly showcasing your work, and leveraging the power of AI to streamline your workflow. They unveil their go-to platforms for reliable cloud backups, easy video conversion for portfolio building, and AI assistants that can help with everything from crafting professional communications to generating content ideas. By sharing their tried-and-true tech arsenal, Anne and Tom empower voice actors to work smarter, not harder, and confidently navigate the ever-evolving digital landscape of the voiceover industry. 00:02 - Anne (Host) Hey, if you're looking to take your podcast to the next level, my podcast consultation coaching services teach you how to sound more authentic, develop smart strategies, and market your show effectively. Let's elevate your podcast together. Visit anneganguzza.com to get started. 00:22 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) It's time to take your business to the next level: the BOSS level. These are the premier business owner strategies and successes being utilized by the industry's top talent today. Rock your business like1 a BOSS—a VO BOSS. Now let's welcome your host, Anne Ganguzza.2 00:42 - Anne (Host) Hey, hey everyone, welcome to the VO BOSS Podcast and the Real BOSS Series. I'm here, Anne Ganguzza, with my good friend, Mr. Tom Dheere. Hello, Tom Dheere, how are you today? 00:53 - Tom (Guest) I am good. Anne Ganguzza, how are you? 00:56 - Anne (Host) I am relieved. 00:58 - Tom (Guest) Relieved? Want to know why? Yes, why? 01:01 - Anne (Host) Well, I had a scare this week where I all of a sudden went to go access one of my audio files to send to my client, and it said, "No, there's no drive." And I went, "Oh my God, I lost my drive!" And that's one of those things—I don't know if you're on an Apple Mac or any kind of computer—when all of a sudden the drive doesn't show up, you're like, "Oh my God, let me unplug it, let me replug it, let me unplug it, replug it," and you wait to hear it spin up. And back in the day, when I used to work in technology, it was a thing. Like your backup plan had to be solid because you could not lose any data, and it used to be very complex where you would have RAID systems and you would have dual backup systems, and you'd pay a lot of money to have systems backing up to other things. And I'll tell you what I got. 01:45 So, paranoid, I unplugged my drive, plugged it back in. Nothing. Same thing, did it multiple times, unplugged it from the cord, I rebooted my computer. Nothing happened. But I'll tell you, I was saved by my favorite tool in the world, which is called Backblaze, which backs up all of my data onto a cloud, and I was able to restore the data that I needed to send to my client to another external drive that I have and do it within the next couple hours. It was actually a few terabytes, right, because my drive... I put everything, Tom, and I think we can talk about this—I have, since I worked in technology, I put everything that's important on an external drive, and that drive gets backed up multiple times. And that way I don't ever have to worry about like, "Oh gosh, if I need to update my..." I never put anything important on my main computer drive, always on an external drive that gets backed up. 02:36 - Tom (Guest) Because it's easy. I think this leads into an extremely important lesson that we could just start right off with. For all you BOSSES out there: do not be 100% cloud-dependent with your data, and do not be 100% external hard drive or internal hard drive-dependent with your data. But back them up, back them up. 02:54 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) Make sure that they are backing each other up. 02:57 - Tom (Guest) What I have is I have Norton 360, which is generally... Norton is known for its antivirus software, and Norton 360 does that. But what it also does is it backs up my hard drive every single day up to one terabyte. And, like you, I have very little actual data on the hard drive of my desktop computer itself. I also use Google Drive's Google Workspace. 03:22 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) If you have a Gmail account or a Gmail address. 03:23 - Anne (Host) Same thing. Yep, you can use Dropbox as well. 03:25 - Tom (Guest) Yep, you can use Dropbox as well. 03:27 You can use OneDrive, you could use Box, you could use CrashPlan, you could use Carbonite. I used to use Carbonite for a very long time, and I was very happy with it, and then I realized I had Carbonite, Box, Dropbox, OneDrive, and Google Drive, and I realized it was so redundant. So my primary cloud-based data storage is a combination of Google Drive with Google Workspace and Norton 360, and I also have an external hard drive which I will actually occasionally hook up and physically back everything up and put it away. So I've got like three—two cloud-based and one drive external hard drive-based—home base for all of my data, in case something bad happens with one or, heaven forbid, two of them. 04:17 - Anne (Host) It's been a lifesaver, I'll tell you what. So Backblaze—just my favorite. By the way, I'm an affiliate, guys. I'm going to put a link for you. What I love about Backblaze is that basically, you just set it to work and it works seamlessly in the background. It will always... it backs up every minute of the day. It backs up, and it doesn't take a lot of resources on your system. So every time you create a file, it's just going to be backing it up to the cloud, and then you just... it's really simple. You go to your account on the cloud and you restore it, and it basically just keeps the most current backup. 04:45 You can keep different versions of backups. If you have version one of a file, version two of a file, you can keep all the versions of your backups for up to a year. It just really depends, and it is super reasonable. I think I pay $99 a year. So I use that in combination with Dropbox. I have like three terabytes for Dropbox, and I keep all my student data on that, and that way I can share my drive with my clients and my students, and that is my Dropbox, which is always backed up, so I don't have to worry about that data either. So I use the combination, and I also have a Google Drive. So those are my cloud-based: Dropbox and Google, and then my Backblaze, which is my backup for all my drives that I have on my computer, and I only put important stuff on my external drives. That way if I need to update my operating system, I don't have to worry about restoring all the other data onto that main drive on my computer. 05:36 And you can... even with Backblaze, you can order, like I had, a four-terabyte drive or a five-terabyte drive. If the entire drive goes—which drives do, I mean, they have a lifespan—you can actually just order a replacement drive, and it ships out within two to three days. It's an encrypted drive that you can actually just plug in via USB, and then ultimately you have that mirrored drive so that you don't have to restore the data through the cloud, because sometimes if you do have five terabytes of data—let's say if you have video—it could take an awfully long time to restore through the online version, and so you can just order a drive, and I've done that two times. So that's one of my favorite tools, Tom. So what are some of your other favorite tools that you have to run your business? 06:18 - Tom (Guest) Like I said, I do use Google Drive regularly. If you have a Gmail account, I think you already get 15 gigs of storage space, but with Google Workspace, you get two terabytes for like $15 a month, and I also use it to synchronize my email. Actually, that's really exciting—the ability to synchronize my email in Gmail with my phone, my desktop, my laptop, and my tablet, so I can access my emails anytime I want. But other tools that I've really been enjoying lately: this is something that comes up a lot. Voice actors of all parts of their journey desperately want to get their hands on the finished product, which is, most of the time, the finished video of a voiceover that they did, most of the time commercials or explainer videos or things like that. 07:07 So I have a two-pronged system. Number one, I go to YouTube once a month. I'm on YouTube every day, who am I kidding? But I mean, for this exercise, I go to YouTube, and I have a list of all the voiceover jobs that I did in the previous quarter or previous month, and I look at all the front-facing stuff, all of the commercials and explainers, the things that would be normally exposed to the public—not like the e-learning modules and the internal corporate stuff—stuff that has been published publicly. 07:34 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) Published publicly, exactly. 07:34 - Tom (Guest) And then what I'll do is I'll find all of them, find the ones that I can. I will save them to a playlist in YouTube, and I have a playlist for every genre of voiceover that... 07:46 - Anne (Host) I've done. Yeah, me too. 07:46 - Tom (Guest) But this is where the tool comes in. I download the YouTube video. There is a specific software that I use called Any Video Converter. We'll put the link down there. It's absolutely free. I think it's just anyvideoconverter.com. And then you download that free software, and all you do is paste the YouTube link in, and then it says, "Do you want audio only, video only, or audio and video?" You download it, and it downloads it to your computer, and then you can save it. And this is why this is really important. It's important for two reasons. Number one, a lot of us want to use professional samples of stuff that we've done to add to our demos. Yes, and we want to use it to add to our online casting site profiles, our sample lists and playlists on Voice123 and other places. But here's the other thing: YouTube videos don't necessarily stay there forever. 08:45 - Anne (Host) They're not necessarily evergreen. 08:47 - Tom (Guest) I have had multiple videos over the years where I went to go look at it, and it was gone. 08:52 Or it was linked to my website, tomdheere.com, and the video was just not there. There's just gray static, or "this video is no longer there." So what you can do is that if you keep that video by downloading it using Any Video Converter or any software of your choice, you can then upload it back to your website, right, or maybe even upload it back onto YouTube and continue to have it as part of your portfolio. 09:15 - Anne (Host) I just want to make sure that it's noted that you have permission and that it's public-facing to begin with. So make sure that it's public-facing. Sometimes, if you don't have permission from the company, it's always nice. I mean, I always, as part of my, "Thank you so much, it's been wonderful working with you," I always say, "If you have a link to the final video, I would really appreciate it. I'd love to see the final product. It was so great working with you." But a lot of times people are busy, and that doesn't happen. 09:40 And so, yeah, if it ultimately shows up on a YouTube, then ultimately it's public-facing. 09:45 And then I am assuming that it's public-facing, it's public property, and that I can take that Any Video Converter and download it. And, yeah, now you own it; you can put it back up on YouTube if you want. It's a video that's not going to disappear all of a sudden off your website if you happen to embed it. But yeah, that's a great tool, and it's wonderful to be able to show not only your demos but work that you've done, and you want that work to exist. So, yeah, that's a great. 10:08 I love that, Tom, because you actually go and actively seek it out, because sometimes I lose track of the jobs that I do, and then it's like, "Oh darn, I wish I had that job to showcase, right? Here's an example of what my voice sounds like in this particular job," or "here on this website." And I used to actually post the link or embed the YouTube link from their site onto my website, but, you're right, it disappeared from mine after a while. Sometimes people just don't keep those videos up on their YouTube, so having it for your own is a wonderful, wonderful tool, and that Any Video Converter, yeah. 10:42 - Tom (Guest) Definitely, and that task is on my monthly action plan. 10:46 - Anne (Host) It is one of the things that... 10:47 - Tom (Guest) I do every single month. It's in the tools section of my monthly action plan: "Download new YouTube videos and save to playlists." 10:54 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) Wow. 10:55 - Tom (Guest) This also applies to Vimeo as well, so you could also look around, because there are some clients that prefer Vimeo over YouTube, which—it's a great platform. I love Vimeo, but YouTube just has so much more SEO clout. Well... 11:06 - Anne (Host) I love Vimeo because I use Vimeo. I have a Vimeo account as well as YouTube, but I have a Vimeo account because if you want to password protect, you can do that on Vimeo. So that helps me when I do my VO Peeps events, and people are requiring access to the videos. I password protect them. 11:23 - Tom (Guest) Well, I'll bounce the ball back to you, Anne: what is another tool that you enjoy using? 11:27 - Anne (Host) Oh my gosh, there are so many. Let's see. I'm going to say I'm going to go the AI route, and I'm going to say I have a couple of AI tools that really, really help me in crafting emails to my clients that are super fast and efficient. And they help me just... First of all, I have a professional version of ChatGPT, which I think is well worth the 20 bucks a month, and I also have CopyAI, which I pay for on a yearly basis. It uses ChatGPT, but it also has different features kind of built in. So, depending on what I want to do, it has a little more marketing aspect to it, so it can create more marketing funnels for me. If I want ChatGPT, I can ask it just about anything. But again, both of them are the premium versions, and I use it for—gosh, I use it for anything. 12:09 Sometimes I'll just ask questions and I'll say, "Hey, craft an email response to my client that includes the following points," or I'll have started a particular email, and I'm like, "You know, I just don't have the time to word this professionally." So let me cut and paste it, and I'll say, "Just reword this professionally and in my voice." So you can train your little ChatGPT AI bot to have your voice in it. And so I use it constantly for crafting professional emails and basically doing a lot of web writing that I might have to do. If I want to craft my bio, I need to create a nice bulleted course list here and that sort of thing. I'll say, "Go to this webpage and tell me what are the major points, what are the summary points of this particular course that I can then utilize." So it's just training your robot, like training your dragon, is really a wonderful thing. 12:58 - Tom (Guest) Cool. Well, I also have two favorite AI tools, both of which are parallel to the ones that you just recommended. You're a paid user for ChatGPT. I am a Gemini fan myself. Gemini is the Google-powered version of OpenAI's ChatGPT. You do need to pay for it, but if you have a Google Workspace account, like I just talked about a few minutes ago, that I use to get more drive space and synchronize all of my emails and all of my devices, you also get access to Gemini. I've been using it very heavily for the past three, four months or so. And what do you use it for? What sorts of things? I use it professionally and personally. I ask it all kinds of questions, looking for statistics or data, potential voiceover leads. And what happened was, a few months ago, I'm here in New York City. I was invited by a Google Wix co-production talking about Google Gemini and then how to use Google Gemini to write blogs in Wix—not necessarily write them for you, but like to just kind of help you come up with ideas. 14:08 Spark ideas, maybe give you some outlines, and then you can put your own creative flair and writing style in it. I will give a quick AI prompt tip. Two things. Number one, always tell your AI who they are before you ask the question. So like, if you have a question about social media, you always say, "You are a social media expert." Then you ask the question. I don't pretend to understand how any of this works, but I do know that if you kind of put them in the, for lack of a better term, "frame of mind," it will give you more accurate answers. 14:43 - Anne (Host) Give me a more professional answer, give me a friendlier, give me more conversational. Yeah, you can absolutely, and... 14:50 - Tom (Guest) Oh, I refine them constantly. What's nice about Gemini is on the left side, it has a link to every single conversation that I've had, and I refer back to them regularly. The other tip is always say please and thank you. For some weird reason, they have noticed that—and this may be a little scary—that the nicer you are when you're asking questions, the better quality you're going to get. I know that's a little creepy. 15:15 - Anne (Host) Well, yeah, you don't want to be angry. I mean, a lot of times people are like, "No, that's the wrong, you stupid idiot." You know what I mean. You should not talk to Alexa that way either, by the way. Just saying. 15:24 - Tom (Guest) Right, no, you don't want to do that either. 15:25 - Anne (Host) No, because you want them to treat you right. 15:57 - Tom (Guest) I believe there are different tiers, like there are with a lot of these programs. I just started my affiliate partnership with them, so I'm exploring all the wonderful things that it can do, but Warmy.io—that's my other favorite AI tool. Wow. 16:07 - Anne (Host) I've got one more. 16:08 - Tom (Guest) I've got one more that I use, and that's Podium. For a long time... 16:11 - Anne (Host) I've used Podium for a good year or two now, I think. Podium takes my VO BOSS podcasts and it crafts out my notes, it crafts out my show notes, it crafts out takeaways, and I found that that works the best. I mean, I can put anything into ChatGPT, but the cool thing about Podium is I can feed it an MP3. So I can take a final MP3 of my episode and I can say, "Craft out 10 takeaways from this." And ultimately I do have to go through everything. I think it's always advisable, no matter what. 16:39 If you're working with AI, you always have to go through it. You always need the human touch, right? You need to like... sometimes it'll come up with some weird things, but for the most part, it does the best summaries, and it's the only one that I have that will take an MP3 or a video and transcribe it, and then it can create a blog out of it as well, which is super powerful, because once you can get from there to the blog, then you can tweak the blog. So it really has done a lot to help me. And so that's Podium, and yes, I'm an affiliate of Podium too. 17:08 So, guys, BOSSES out there, if you find tools that you like, you can always create a little affiliate membership with that, because, I mean, even if it's a few cents a month, it's a few cents a month, and I have people who follow me that I don't steer them wrong. I'm not going to be an affiliate of a product that I don't love and that I wouldn't recommend. And so that's the way I really feel that I've gotten people who follow me that trust my recommendations and these tools that Tom and I love. I mean, we recommend them wholeheartedly. It's not something because affiliate memberships don't, I don't think, make you enough money to... you know. I mean, I'm not just going to sign up for everything and become an affiliate. 17:42 It's only going to be the stuff that I absolutely love and the stuff that I'm going to talk about. And I actually got a little key fob the other day so that people can scan the key fob, and I can become an affiliate of that, so that they can scan the key fob and go get all my contact information, go to every website that I have, and it's really a lot of fun, and I'll be testing that out at VO Atlanta, so that's going to be really cool too. So all these tools that Tom and I are talking about are stuff that we've tested and stuff that we recommend. And so, BOSSES, that's another part of your income journey really, is thinking about products you love and maybe thinking about becoming affiliates of them. Any other tools, Tom, and I've got one more that I'm going to talk about that I love. 18:21 - Tom (Guest) It's funny because I wanted to... 18:23 - Anne (Host) It might be the same one. 18:23 - Tom (Guest) Well, I wanted to say that we are recording this right now using a fabulous tool called Riverside. Yes, and I've been guest hosting on the VO BOSS for a couple of years now, and she's been using Riverside, and I think it's a fantastic program. The one that I use when I have guests, when I am doing recorded video chats, is I use StreamYard. 18:43 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) They're both very similar. 18:44 - Tom (Guest) They have their own sets of bells and whistles. Both of them are fantastic. So if you're looking to start a podcast or if you just want to record conversations, Riverside or StreamYard—both of them are fantastic. 18:55 - Anne (Host) And here's one that I think we both have in common, Tom, I know that you use it, and it is... it is my graphic wonder, Canva. 19:03 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) Ah, Canva! I love Canva. 19:04 - Anne (Host) Canva changed the game, I'll tell you what. And I'm not saying that I'm a graphic artist, because nothing would ever replace my web designer, because my web designer is an amazing graphic artist. There's something about being able to see and visualize graphics and where they go and putting them together and making them look good. But if you're just a beginner and you need to do a few social media graphics, you need to do certain things like remove a background. You cannot go wrong with Canva. I've been using Canva for years. It is an absolute favorite tool of mine. 19:33 - Tom (Guest) I use it constantly. I mean, for those of you who have watched any of my how-to videos or have been in a workshop with me where I'm doing a presentation, I use Canva, I'm pretty sure. 19:43 - Anne (Host) Anne, you also have the... 19:44 - Anne (Host) Canva Pro. You have the paid version, Canva Pro. I do. 19:48 - Tom (Guest) So do I. I mean, it's got so many functions. You'd be shocked at the amount of things that it can make. I mean, I primarily use it for my how-to videos and presentations, but I also use it for making thumbnails for my YouTube videos. 20:01 - Anne (Host) Social media graphics. 20:03 - Tom (Guest) Yep, it's got a great library of content, and you can upload all of your content as well. 20:07 - Anne (Host) And also, I'm going to give myself one other plug. 20:09 - Tom (Guest) I'm going to give myself one other plug. There are a bunch of apps that you can have called up on the left side of your Canva. There is one which is to add an AI voice to your presentations, and one of my AI voices is one of those voices. So, yes, you could actually click on that. You could have me voicing your content. 20:27 - Anne (Host) Tom, I'm going to add you to my next presentation. I'm going to add Tom Dheere voice to my next presentation. But that's awesome. I love Canva and the Canva Pro. And remember, Tom, back in the day when you were creating, let's say, a website or a social media graphic and you would subscribe to these places where you could buy the rights to the graphics? Because you need to be legal about these things. You can't just be stealing graphics and downloading graphics. Canva has a great—and the Canva Pro version has a great—amount of graphics that you can use that are built within it and licensed. So you don't have to pay for another tool to get your graphics. So you can get professional graphics. If you need, like a studio graphic to put in the background of one of your social media posts, you can download it from Canva, and the license is there, and you're clear. 21:13 - Tom (Guest) Yeah, what's very interesting is that you can just run searches in their library to find graphics and stuff like that. And then, if you have the Canva Pro account—I don't know if you've noticed this, Anne—is when you click on stuff and you use it, it'll say, "You just saved this amount of money." 21:27 - Anne (Host) Oh, yeah, right. 21:28 - Tom (Guest) Right, because if you didn't have a Canva Pro account, you would have had to pay à la carte for all of these graphics, but as part of the Canva annual fee, you can get access to all of those graphics for free, and you are using them legally and lawfully. 21:40 - Anne (Host) Yeah, I love it. I love it. I love knowing that I'm using them legally and lawfully, because that used to be a worry for me. I mean, I used to be like, "Oh my God," and each graphic I would pay. Even sometimes I'd go to those websites. I think I had an Envato Elements account that, you know, I could go and get the graphics and use those for my social media. And it's just nice because it's built into Canva already, and everything that you use these days has AI built into it. 22:04 Guys, there's really not much that I think you're going to be using tool-wise that isn't going to have some sort of AI built into it. So, again, it's one of those things where I know we need to be careful of it for our voices, and we need to make sure that we're getting compensated. Make sure that any tool that you're using that has AI built into it, that you're within the confines of your own ethical thoughts and what you think is right and fair compensation. And, Tom, you're getting paid for that voice that you have in the middle of Canva, so that's good. And so tools that are ethically sourced, right, that are using AI, I think it's just going to be so embedded into a lot of our tools these days that we're not even going to notice anymore, and it's going to be like... you know, I always tell people with Voice over IP, back in the day I used to install Voice over IP phone systems, and people were like, "Oh no, it'll never work." 22:52 But honestly, that's all we use these days. There's not one phone call you make that isn't going over an internet or a network, a data line, and there are no more POTS lines that are installed. Back in the day, they were Plain Old Telephone POTS lines, P-O-T-S. And so nowadays, all of your communication goes over data lines, and that is Voice over IP. Really, same thing with AI. It's going to be embedded in just about everything that we do. So just be careful and be thoughtful. But these tools are something that I can't live without now. I mean, really. 23:23 - Tom (Guest) Me too. I don't know where I'd be without Canva and all the tools we just talked about today. 23:27 - Anne (Host) I don't know where I would be without my Alexa telling me how many ounces are in a tablespoon or how many... you know, when I need to do some simple conversion. I mean, we're talking like everyday life. So yeah, these are just some of our favorite tools. Tom, I'd love to do another episode in a few months from now to see if we've come up with any other favorite tools. 23:44 But I love sharing tech, geeky gadgets, because you're kind of a tech girl. I think we've come up with a really great list, and, guys, we'll list all of that in the show notes for you today. And thank you so much, Tom, for yet another wonderful, enlightening episode. 23:59 - Tom (Guest) Thank you, always glad to be here. 24:01 - Anne (Host) Big shout out to our sponsor, IPDTL, which I use every single day, by the way, guys. IPDTL, I use for all of my student communications. I love it. It's wonderful, people can record, it's super easy, and you can find out more at IPDTL.com. Guys, have an amazing week, and we'll see you next week. Bye. 24:21 - Speaker 2 (Announcement) Join us next week for another edition of VO BOSS with your host, Anne Ganguzza, and take your business to the next level. Sign up for our mailing list at voboss.com and receive exclusive content, industry-revolutionizing tips and strategies, and new ways to rock your business like a3 BOSS. Redistribution with permission. Coast-to-coast connectivity via4 IPDTL.

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 396: CrashPlan's Andrew Orrison talks Backup

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2025 59:37


Andrew Orrison from CrashPlan joins the pod to talk about a couple topics: how they've moved to be their own organization from being part of Code42, and how they use the Mac Admins Slack as a way to support the community. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge@theinternet.social Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Guests: Andrew Orrison - LinkedIn Links: Mac Admins Slack Vendor Guidelines Parablu acquisition Lady Washington (Ship) Sponsors: Kandji 1Password Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson  

Design Better Podcast
Dan Mall: Scaling design systems

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 15:43


There's a reason why we've been talking about design systems for a number of years now—it's the key to collaboration at scale. Few people get that more than Dan Mall who has helped the world's most recognizable brands create design practices that are truly sustainable and successful. We spoke to Dan about his new book, Design That Scales, which dives into how to create, manage, and sustain a successful design system. And he shares where the people involved in a design system fit and how they can best collaborate.  In case you missed it, Dan also joined us for an AMA recently. He's a wealth of knowledge. Find the full show notes, transcript, and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/dan-mall Bio Dan Mall is a husband, dad, teacher, creative director, designer, founder, and entrepreneur from Philly. He shares as much as he can to create better opportunities for those who wouldn't have them otherwise. Most recently, he ran design system consultancy SuperFriendly for over a decade. Now he's trying to share as much of what he's learned to help designers get the respect they deserve. Currently creating Design System University. [more via Dan's website]. *** Premium Episodes on Design Better This is a premium episode on Design Better (learn more in the announcement here). We'll be releasing two premium episodes per month, along with two free episodes for everyone. Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgrade to paid *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Rewind: Sara Seager: Astrophysicist pushing the boundaries of collaboration while discovering exoplanets

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 39:04


Design Better Podcast
Celene Aubry: 100+ years of designing for legendary musicians at Hatch Show Print

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 18:04


Get access to the full episode on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/celene-aubry Back in 2010, Aarron visited Hatch Show Print, a small print shop with a storied history that began in 1879. Hand cut wood block type and illustrations filled the shelves around presses busy producing posters for famous bands and artists. Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, and so many other legendary folks have used Hatch Show Print to promote their tours, and their aesthetic has been a major influence on design for more than 100 years. They're still producing beautiful print work today and operate out of the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum.  We spoke with Celene Aubry, Associate Director and Manager at Hatch Show Print, about the origins of Hatch Show, the role of letterpress in the digital era and why their mantra is “preservation through production,” the challenges and joys of working with old tools, and how they are going about educating the next generation of letterpress designers. Bio Celene Aubry is the Associate Director and Manager at Hatch Show Print, the iconic letterpress print shop continuously operating since 1879 in Nashville, Tennessee. Aubry becomes the first woman to run the letterpress print shop in its 140-year history. Celene is also guiding the development of additional Hatch Show Print programs and activities that leverage a classroom and gallery, while still carrying on the shop's tradition of preservation through production, making posters for the customers whenever time allows. Premium Episodes on Design Better This is a premium episode on Design Better (learn more in the announcement here). We'll be releasing two premium episodes per month, along with two free episodes for everyone. Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgrade to paid Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn
TechByter Worldwide 2024-06-14: Switching From CrashPlan To Backblaze. Short Circuits.

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2024 17:15


Despite having used CrashPlan for the past eight years and still feeling that it is a viable online backup service, I have switched to Backblaze. In Short Circuits: Starting in less that two weeks, Facebook will begin using your public posts, photos, and chatbot iterations to train its AI. • Libraries are among my favorite institutions because of their high-tech and low-tech solutions to today's problems.

Design Better Podcast
Ben Clymer: Hodinkee founder on watch design and creating a compelling content brand

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 14:42


Get access to the full episode on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/ben-clymer Aarron fell down a rabbit hole when the Apple Watch came out. He knew nothing about watches, their design history and the immense investment of human effort it's taken to engineer accurate timepieces until he bought an Apple Watch. He loves wearing a watch, but notifications and tracking caused him to abandon it for something simpler and mechanical. Anyone curious about watches will inevitably end up at Hodinkee.com, the premier publication about watches and the rich culture around them. Hodinkee was founded by Ben Clymer, who found his way into watches when his grandfather gave him the Omega watch right off his wrist. It sparked not only a deep passion for watches, but a company that has built a community of enthusiasts around the world. You might be thinking, watches are a strange topic for Design Better to cover. But they represent a beautiful intersection of design and technology that has been pursued for centuries. They're also one of the few trans-generational objects in our lives that connect us with the people we love, as Ben Clymer shared with us in our conversation. We spoke with Ben about consulting with Jony Ive on Apple's watch design, Jony's deep dive into horology, how Ben went about creating such a compelling content brand, and his journey from being a founder and CEO back to being an individual contributor to the company he started. Bio Benjamin Clymer is widely considered to be a leading voice in the wristwatch industry. He is regularly quoted in major publications including The New York Times, Reuters, Forbes, Departures, GQ, and the Financial Times, and was dubbed “The High Priest of Horology” by The New York Times in 2013. Benjamin has acted as a consultant and guest speaker for Apple, and was named to “The Hypebeast Hundred” as one of the 100 most important influencers in global culture in both 2013 and 2014.  *** Premium Episodes on Design Better This is a premium episode on Design Better (learn more in the announcement here). We'll be releasing two premium episodes per month, along with two free episodes for everyone. Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgraid to paid *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Natsai Audrey Chieza: Designing with biology

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 40:41


View show notes, transcript, and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/natsai-audrey-chieza Steve Jobs perfectly described the creative process when he said, “Creativity is just connecting the dots”. Innovation and new ideas are often found by combining the familiar in new ways. Natsai Audrey Chieza, founder of Faber Futures, is doing just that.  Natsai started her education as an architect, became fascinated by materials and transferred into biology, and today is designing new textiles, design processes, and manufacturing methods by harnessing biological technology. She's a rare individual who can hop between disciplines to design in new ways. We talk with Natsai about the work she and her team at Faber Futures are doing to help governments and large organizations design more sustainable products using bacteria, fungi, and algae as building tools, and how biophilic design technology could help us address climate change. Bio Natsai Audrey Chieza is a visionary designer and thought leader. She is the founder and CEO of Faber Futures and a co-founder of Normal Phenomena of Life (NPOL). Launched in 2018, Faber Futures is a pioneering design agency that melds consumer biotechnology advancements with real-world applications. In 2023, Chieza co-founded NPOL, a consumer brand offering biotech products online. NPOL makes tangible how biotechnology can generate new materials that can be beautifully designed to support climate goals and the cultivation of resilient bioeconomy value chains. ​Chieza's approach involves broad-ranging partnerships across biotech, consumer sectors, and cultural institutions. It uses collaborative, story-driven strategies to catalyse engagement and concrete action on critical issues. Notable clients and commissioning bodies include Ginkgo Bioworks, adidas, the Design Museum, MIT Media Lab, and the World Economic Forum (WEF).  ​As a member of the WEF's Global Futures Council on Synthetic Biology, Chieza advocates the integration of design and culture in policy development for bioeconomies powered by biotechnology. Her insights and leadership are sought after on various stages, including as a speaker at SxSW, TED, and Design Indaba. Chieza's contributions to biophilic design have earned her significant media coverage and accolades, including the 2019 INDEX award, known as the Nobel Prize for design. Premium Episodes on Design Better This ad-supported episode is available to everyone. If you'd like to hear it ad-free, upgrade to our premium subscription, where you'll get an additional 2 ad-free episodes per month (4 total). Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgraid to paid Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Pablo Stanley: A creative force of nature on the importance persistence and hustle

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 20:09


Get access to the full episode, show notes, transcript and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/pablo-stanley Pablo Stanley's creativity seemingly knows no bounds. Constant doodling is a key to his creative process, and has spawned countless projects including web comics like The Design Team and Stanley and Rupert, an illustration generation platform called Blush, and most recently Bueno, a platform that lets people build virtual worlds. Pablo makes us all feel like slackers! We spoke with Pablo about his childhood in Mexico and how it influences his creativity, the wide array of creative projects he's working on, and the importance of persistence and hustle when you're earning a creative living independently. Bio Pablo Stanley is a Co-founder at Musho—AI Designer, Blush, and Lummi—tools to unlock people's creativity. He's also working on Bueno, and previously made Robotos, Humankind, Transhumans, Humaaans, Open Peeps, etc . Previously he was was a Lead at InVision, a Staff Designer at Lyft, and co-founder of Carbon Health. He gives design workshops and shares design tutorials on YouTube. He also writes a comic- The Design Team. Premium Episodes on Design Better This is a premium episode on Design Better (learn more in the announcement here). We'll be releasing two premium episodes per month, along with two free episodes for everyone. Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgraid to paid Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Tasha Golden: Avoiding burnout while pursuing creativity with passion

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2024 42:52


Find full show notes, transcript, and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/tasha-golden As designers and creatives, we often find our work to be meaningful and fulfilling. But creativity can also come at a price. There can be a danger of burning out when we pursue creativity with passion, and our guest today, Tasha Golden, has experienced this herself. She lost her music career as a touring songwriter due to severe burnout and depression, and now researches well-being, how it's affected by creativity, and how to use this knowledge to drive real change. We speak with Tasha about her work on Project Uncaged, a trauma-informed creative writing program for incarcerated girls, as well as the The Arts on Prescription program: a model of care that's gaining traction in the US—in which health- and social care providers can refer patients to community arts, culture, and nature experiences to support their health. We also also discuss how creatives can better support mental health—for themselves and others. Bio Learn more about Tasha here on her site. Tasha Golden, PhD is a singer/songwriter turned public health scientist, and a leading expert in Creativity and Wellbeing. Holding a PhD in Public Health, Dr. Golden has published extensively on the impacts of creativity, aesthetics, and the arts on health and well-being. She leads research at the International Arts + Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University, serves as adjunct faculty for the University of Florida's Center for Arts in Medicine, and is lead author of “Arts on Prescription: A Field Guide for US Communities.” [Find Tasha's full bio, and ways to connect with her, here: https://www.tashagolden.com/designbetter] Premium Episodes on Design Better This ad-supported episode is available to everyone. If you'd like to hear it ad-free, upgrade to our premium subscription, where you'll get an additional 2 ad-free episodes per month (4 total). Premium subscribers also get access to our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, and our new enhanced newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show.  Upgraid to paid *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Jonathan Adler: Famed potter and designer on bringing creativity into all aspects of life

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 13:27


Visit our Substack to get access to the full show: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/jonathan-adler We've admired Jonathan Adler's work for a long time. Though he started his career as a potter, today he designs sumptuous furnishings and interiors that inject energy and joy into everyday life. His work is decadent but not frumpy and always delivered with a winking sense of humor. If anyone truly knows how to bring creativity into all aspects of life, it's Jonathan Adler. We speak with Jonathan about why every creative person needs a naysayer to rebel against, how he surrounds himself with things that make him happy, and how he balances the tension between creating objects that have a lot of color and contrast, while making sure everything works together. By the way, Eli's wife Courtney has listened to many (though not all!) of our episodes, and this one happens to be her favorite so far—so you're in for a treat.  Brace yourself for some adult language.

Design Better Podcast
Brian Tyler, composer for Yellowstone, Crazy Rich Asians, Mario Brothers, and more, on his creative process

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 44:15


Find the transcript, full show notes, and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/brian-tyler Our conversation today takes us further into the creative process across different mediums. If you're a fan of Yellowstone, Crazy Rich Asians, Iron Man 3, or the recent Mario Brothers movie, then chances are good that one of the soundtrack clips in the trailer below is familiar to you. And today on Design Better we speak with the person behind them all: Emmy-award nominated composer Brian Tyler. We talk to Brian about his childhood influences, growing up in an artistic family, and how he finds the starting threads of a score. Bio Brian Tyler is a multiple BAFTA and Emmy Award nominee, platinum-selling recording artist, and has been a composer and conductor on over 100 feature films. Tyler's scoring credits include Joss Whedon's Avengers: Age of Ultron, James Wan's Furious 7 and F. Gary Gray's Fate of the Furious as well as others in the Fast and the Furious franchise, Shane Black's Iron Man 3, Alan Taylor's Thor: The Dark World, Jon Chu's Crazy Rich Asians, for which he was voted to the 2019 Oscar shortlist for Best Original Score. Brian also tours as a successful electronic artist and producer, playing major festivals such as EDC and Hardfest, and he recently launched "Are We Dreaming", a completely immersive audio-visual experience created by Tyler himself, which debuted in October 2021 on the 400-foot Main Stage at Lost Lands Music Festival; an epic two-hour midnight performance for a crowd of 30,000 people.  *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Design Better Podcast
Bonus: Eric Snowden, Head of Adobe Design, on AI + Design

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 49:09


Find the transcript, show notes, and more on our Substack: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/eric-snowden Adobe has been the big wrench in our creative toolbox for decades. But there's a new tool shaking up our workflow —Generative AI. Eric Snowden, leader of Adobe's design team, sees a big opportunity for designers to extend and enhance the creative process by folding generative AI into each of our tools and we wanted to get his take on what's around the corner.  We spoke with Eric about his journey from Atlantic records during a period of upheaval in the music industry and what he learned there, to his time on the Behance product team and working his way up through leadership roles at Adobe. Eric leads a team of over 600 people, so we also talk about finding the right size for teams (and Amazon's “Two Pizza Team” framework), as well as how R&D works at Adobe. Bio Eric Snowden is the Vice President of Design at Adobe overseeing a multidisciplinary team of designers responsible for the Creative Cloud & Document Cloud suite of product and services. His team is responsible for the Digital Video & Audio, Digital Imaging, Design & Web, Documents, Mobile, Portfolio, and Services across web, desktop, and mobile surfaces. *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

The CyberWire
New vulnerability packs a punch.

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 34:03


Unpacking LogoFAIL's threat to Windows and Linux. The US DHS's new healthcare cybersecurity strategy, and dual Russian influence campaigns. A look at supply chain risks, increased bot activity in retail, Meta's end-to-end encryption in Messenger and Android's Autospill vulnerability. On today's Industry Voices segment, we welcome Todd Thorsen, CISO from CrashPlan, with insights on data resiliency. And the discovery of an alleged software 'kill switch' in Polish trains. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest On today's Industry Voices segment, we welcome Todd Thorsen, CISO from CrashPlan. Todd discusses data resiliency.  In an era where ransomware and malicious attacks are relentless, even the most secure organizations are not immune. These attacks can cripple organizations financially, operationally, and damage their reputation and compliance standing. My guest today is Todd Thorsen, CISO from CrashPlan. In this sponsored Industry Voices segment, we delve into crucial strategies for bolstering data resiliency. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/232 Selected Reading Just about every Windows and Linux device vulnerable to new LogoFAIL firmware attack (Ars Technica)  CISA, NSA, FBI and International Cybersecurity Authorities Publish Guide on The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps (CISA)  The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps (Joint release) HEALTHCARE  SECTOR CYBERSECURITY (US Department of Health and Human Services) HHS releases cybersecurity strategy for health care sector (American Hospital Association) Fake Taylor Swift Quotes Are Being Used to Spread Anti-Ukraine Propaganda (WIRED) Obfuscation and AI Content in the Russian Influence Network “Doppelgänger” Signals Evolving Tactics (Recorded Future) Britain summons Russian ambassador over years-long FSB cyberespionage campaign (Reuters) NCSC exposes Russian cyber attacks on UK political processes (ComputerWeekly) Russian FSB cyber actor Star Blizzard continues worldwide spear-phishing campaigns (NCSC) Defending Democracy (NCSC) The State of Supply Chain Defense: Annual Global Insights Report (BlueVoyant) 2023 Holiday Bad Bot Report (Kasada) Facebook and Messenger to automatically encrypt messages (BBC) Your mobile password manager might be exposing your credentials (TechCrunch) Dieselgate, but for trains – some heavyweight hardware hacking (BadCyber) Share your feedback. We want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show.  Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © 2023 N2K Networks, Inc.

Procrastination
S06e15 - Sauvegarder ses textes

Procrastination

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 16:36


Petit épisode concentré sur de la technique pure, mais conserver son travail – et le récupérer en cas d'accident informatique – peut représenter une question cruciale dans une vie d'écriture. Quelles sont les bonnes pratiques – et comment peut-on demander des coups de pouce simple à son entourage ? Mélanie explique comment elle protège non seulement ses textes, mais les traductions dont elle a la lourde responsabilité ; Lionel présente des règles d'hygiène informatiques simples, notamment la règle dite du "3-2-1". Estelle montre que l'on peut aussi se montrer détendu·e avec cette question, et que le papier, aussi, peut être la forme la plus fondamentale d'archivage. Références citées - Brandon Sanderson - Services de synchronisation cloud : Dropbox (https://dropbox.com), iCloud (https://www.apple.com/icloud/), Google Drive (https://drive.google.com/), Box (https://www.box.com) - Service de sauvegarde dans le cloud : Backblaze (http://backblaze.com), Carbonite (https://www.carbonite.com), Crashplan (http://crashplan.com) - Carbon Copy Cloner (https://bombich.com) - Laurent Kloetzer (qui va peut-être se demander ce qu'il fait là ?)

Hinter den Spiegeln
010 - Nach der Hochzeit... was dann?

Hinter den Spiegeln

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 85:43


Der Abschluss der Hochzeitsfotografie-Reihe - was passiert nach der Hochzeit?- ein Geständnis gleich zu Beginn- das Gelaber interessiert doch eh keinen- der Sony Pro Photographer Live Talk im zeitlichen Chaos- immernoch Hochzeitsfotografie, wieso ist das bloss so ausufernd?- Hochzeitsreise, Kinder, Alltag, ...- Christopher kriegt sich nicht mehr ein- was machst du nach der Hochzeit als Erstes?- Unterscheidung Zuhause oder Hotel bei Björn- Backup auf zwei externe SSD Festplatten via Photomechanic- Daten superspreaden- Erfahrungen mit Speicherkartenlesegeräten- Backup in die Cloud? - Digitalisierung in Deutschland- Christophers Backup Karte verlässt nie seinen Körper. NIE!- der nördliche Teil von Deutschland ist für Christopher noch nicht Reisen- zurück im Büro noch ein Backup auf's Raid-System- Online Backup via Crashplan- neue SD-Karten für jede Hochzeit?- Spiegelung von Festplatten via Carbon Copy Cloner- ein RAID System ist kein Backup- gefährliches Halbwissen- Narrative Select- Bildauswahl auf dem iPad- Kriterien bei der Bildauswahl- Positiv oder Negativauswahl- Airplay und PS4 Controller machen Bildauswahl chillig- mehrere Durchgänge bei der Bildauswahl- in SW fotografieren um die Bildauswahl zu erleichtern?- Emotion beats perfection, was haben Julia und Gil da bloss angerichtet?- der Sinn und Nutzen von Presets und ob es immer gleich genutzt wird oder variiert pro Hochzeit- den Hochzeitstag in Abschnitte einteilen- Referenzansicht zur Bildbearbeitung- Croppen macht Bilder viel besser- Anteil Farbe und SW bei der finalen Abgabe- Abgabe mit und ohne Korn bei Bildern- Teaser-Slideshow mit Smartslides- verschiedene Gedanken zur Nutzung von Slideshows- Online-Galerien von Pic-Time (15% Discount auf jährliches Abo mit dem Code: S9CQJS) und Pixieset - Björn feiert Pic-Time's unzählig gute Features- was kommt bei PicDrop?- verschiedene Ansätze beim Verkauf von Alben- bei Kunden in Erinnerung rufen mit kleinen Geschenken- bei Kunden nach Feedback fragen

Investing in Stocks & Crypto for Beginners
STOCK MARKET CRASH PLAN!? Buy the dip? go all cash? or real estate downpayment?

Investing in Stocks & Crypto for Beginners

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 26:12


On this episode of the Two Random Dudes Invest podcast we discuss how to prepare your portfolio for stock market corrections. Should you sell everything? Should you rotate out of high growth stocks into value plays? Everybody will have a different strategy, but the important thing is to actually have a plan and to stick to it. Corrections and crashes are always around the corner and learning to live with them will help you be a better trader and investor. Remember, the goal is to buy low and sell high. Or to pick stocks you can hold in your portfolio for multiple years without having to check your account daily. Our instincts play tricks on us and make us take on more risk when stocks are high, but maybe it’s better take more risk when they are going down. Is the correction over? Nobody actually knows the answer, but together we are stronger. And together we can grow. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Our favourite charting tool / Trading View /with free version / 30$ OFF for paid with the link: https://www.tradingview.com/gopro/?sh... Recommended platform for Canadian beginner investors: Wealth Simple | Get 10$ free when you signup with this link: https://my.wealthsimple.com/app/publi... Danylo's favourite trading platform | QUESTRADE | get 25$ when you open an account: https://start.questrade.com/?oaa_prom... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• DISCLAIMER: We are two random dudes on YouTube. All content in this video is for entertainment purposes only and NOT FINANCIAL advice. The stock market is very risky and you can lose a lot of money (or all of it). Always do your own due diligence. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Coffee Powered Systems
How To Backup Your Digital Systems and Feel Secure (Digital Disaster Plan)

Coffee Powered Systems

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020 22:19


Episode 018. What's your digital recovery plan? I'm betting you don't have one, but I hope I'm wrong. This is a juicy episode, and really important, so save this one so you can reference it later. When things go wrong with your digital systems, what are you going to do? We pay for health insurance, life insurance and many others, so why not be prepared with your digital insurance? Don't be afraid to pay for services that protect your digital assets. For the transcript and full show notes: https://www.mirandamerten.com/18 (https://www.mirandamerten.com/18) Discussed In This Episode:What is a digital recovery plan? What will you do if PayPal locks your account? What happens if your website crashes or is hacked? Accidentally delete your email contacts? What will you do if the apps on your phone don't work? Password manager loses all the files? What if your project manager app crashes? Why you might want to have an IT partner Mentioned in this episode: https://www.crashplan.com/en-us/ (Crashplan, Cloud Backup Software) https://www.carbonite.com/ (Carbonite, Backup and Recovery) https://www.malcare.com/ (MalCare, Firewall and Malware Protection) https://sucuri.net/ (Sucuri, Website Security) https://hostingchecker.com/ (Hosting Checker) https://www.whoishostingthis.com/ (Who Is Hosting This) https://jetpack.com/ (Jetpack) Other helpful links: https://www.mirandamerten.com/power-pack (Free Productivity Power Pack) https://www.mirandamerten.com (Website) https://www.instagram.com/mirandamerten (Instagram) (@mirandamerten) Send a voice message: https://www.speakpipe.com/CoffeePoweredSystems (https://www.speakpipe.com/CoffeePoweredSystems)

The Joseph Carlson Show
Episode 82 - Market Crash Plan: I'm Selling... (bonds)

The Joseph Carlson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 23:28


Episode 82 - Market Crash Plan: I'm Selling... (bonds) by The Joseph Carlson Show

The Joseph Carlson Show
Episode 82 - Market Crash Plan: I'm Selling... (bonds)

The Joseph Carlson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 23:28


Episode 82 - Market Crash Plan: I'm Selling... (bonds) by The Joseph Carlson Show

7 Minute Security
7MS #406: Securing Your Family During and After a Disaster - Part 4

7 Minute Security

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2020 40:17


This episode of the 7MS podcast is brought to you by ITProTV. It’s never too late to start a new career in IT or move up the later, and ITProTV has you covered. From CompTIA and Cisco to ECCouncil and VMWare. Get a 7-day free trial and save 30% off all plans by going to itpro.tv/7MS First and foremost, I hope you all are doing well and taking care of yourselves. Today's episode focuses on disasters, which is unfortunately a very appropriate topic. As a quick refresher, our family had a fire a few months ago. It sucked. I talked about the day of the fire in this episode then did a "how do we get back on the grid?" episode here and then answered some of your FAQs here. Regardless of if your DR plan includes fires, virus outbreaks, tornados or zombie attacks, it's important to have a solid plan for your family and business. So in today's episode I cover these main two topics: A DIY $500 NAS + Unlimited Cloud Backup Plan In trying to be more organized with my backup strategy, I set out to create a new backup plan with the following criteria: Priced at ~$500 One on-prem array Encrypted at rest Backs up to cloud with encryption key I control Unlimited scalable storage I found my solution using this awesome video but I need to warn you about something right off the bat: the config in this video and in today's episode is not supported by CrashPlan because CP doesn't have a native backup agent that will run on the Synology NAS (at the time of this writing, anyway). With that said, here's the grocey list of things that make up my backup rig: (See more info on the show notes for todya's episode at 7ms.us)

Erichsen Geld & Gold, der Podcast für die erfolgreiche Geldanlage

Für den Plan im Falle eines Crashs, gibt es im Prinzip nur zwei Dinge zu beachten, die es aber in sich haben. Sie sind einfach zu verstehen, also unbedingt anhören! ► TIPP: Sichere Dir wöchentlich meine Tipps zu Gold, Aktien, ETFs & Co. – 100% gratis: https://erichsen-report.de/ Viel Freude beim Anhören. Über eine Bewertung und einen Kommentar freue ich mich sehr. Jede Bewertung ist wichtig. Denn sie hilft dabei den Podcast bekannter zu machen. Damit noch mehr Menschen verstehen, wie sie ihr Geld mit Rendite anlegen können. ► Mein YouTube-Kanal: http://youtube.com/ErichsenGeld ► Folge mir bei Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ErichsenGeld/ ► Folge meinem Instagram-Account: https://www.instagram.com/erichsenlars Die verwendete Musik wurde unter www.soundtaxi.net lizensiert. Ein wichtiger abschließender Hinweis: Aus rechtlichen Gründen darf ich keine individuelle Einzelberatung geben. Meine geäußerte Meinung stellt keinerlei Aufforderung zum Handeln dar. Sie ist keine Aufforderung zum Kauf oder Verkauf von Wertpapieren.

Command Control Power: Apple Tech Support & Business Talk
330: "A Cautionary Tale" With Richard Wingfield Of Envision Design

Command Control Power: Apple Tech Support & Business Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 50:34


Topics: -This week we have the pleasure of sitting down with Richard Wingfield, owner and Head Geek at Envision Design based in Houston, TX -Richard is a frequent contributor to the show, not just on air but behind the scenes in frequent communications with the hosts -After taking the time to emotionally recover, he is ready to share a personal story of data loss with a long time customer. -Envision Design has minimum requirements for a Synology: + system, 4 bay or more, that support Btrfs (https://www.synology.com/en-global/dsm/Btrfs), which supports roll backs -Their company keeps an offsite data center in Austin, TX where they can provide redundant backups for their customers.  It is out of the flood zone and drivable to quickly access their data. -Costs for offsite backup are higher than the large companies like CrashPlan or Backblaze but the personal service and quick turnaround is a compelling sales pitch -Richard describes some of the options he presents to his clients for data redundancy and backup. He now requires a level of minimal redundancy that he will not budge on.  -Richard’s story is of a drive failure that went horribly wrong.  This was initially due to a software bug that was compounded by human error. -As Richard takes us through this, we find there was a software bug with DSM 6 that began syncing local deletions on their Synology to their offsite copy.  Since the client did not want to spend money, they opted for a sync solution on the archive server as opposed to any kind of versioning. -They relied on Drive Savers to restore data. Unfortunately, after a couple of months of working on it, all of the header information was missing so they received a bunch of files without names or metadata. -All totaled, the burden of cost was placed on Envision Design and ended up costing them upwards of around $12,000. -With all this talk of data restoration, Jerry recalls a story of working with Drive Savers and a rescinded commission -Envision Design sticks with all Iron Wolf drives to populate their Synology devices with.  One of the benefits of additional health data if you go with 4 TB or greater. -Bonding multiple NICs is another benefit that Richard’s team takes advantage of. -Cost of downtime is a language that most clients will understand when helping them decide on budget  -Sam is eager to look into off-site backup storage as another area of recurring revenue 

The Profitable Photographer
009 Andrew Darlow: Protect Your Data & Streamline Your Processes

The Profitable Photographer

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2019


Managing and protecting your precious your files, using your time wisely when editing, and staying organized is an important part of being profitable as a photographer. If your photographs disappear or become corrupted, there is potential for huge financial losses. Andrew is an expert in this area and has taught thousands of photographers is system for staying safe and streamline at the same time. In this episode, Luci and Andrew discuss: Should photographers use a RAID storage system and what are some alternatives? UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) Units (Battery Backups).  Why you might want to install one or more in your home or studio, and when you don't really need them. What to do to protect your computers and data drives during electrical storms. Docks and hubs, and an important thing to consider when using them. Why Apple's Time Machine can be a lifesaver for your data. Windows has a similar option that comes with Windows 10 and some earlier Windows OS versions called File History, and a popular 3rd party application called "Genie Timeline" can also be used. A simple system for "syncing" your data from one location to another. Andrew recommends Get Backup Pro (belightsoft.com/products/getbackup). Online backup systems and specific things to consider when choosing one. Andrew recommends BackBlaze.com and Crashplan.com. How to manage your smartphone photos and videos. Tips for optimizing your computer's performance and reducing the chances of losing data. What to do if your external drive does not mount. Media card management: Should you delete photos on your camera? A simple backup strategy to help avoid losing the photos and videos on your media cards. A printing tip to speed up your output without sacrificing quality. "Success in my mind is being able to do what you would like to do, with whom you would like to do it, when you'd like to do it, and also be a good citizen while you do it." — Andrew Darlow Connect with Andrew Darlow: SPECIAL GIFTS for Luci's listeners: workflowschool.com/profit Website: www.andrewdarlow.com Facebook (personal page): facebook.com/adarlow Facebook (business page): facebook.com/andrewdarlow Instagram: instagram.com/andrewdarlow Twitter: @AndrewDarlow   Connect with Luci Dumas: Twitter: @lucidumas Facebook: facebook.com/LuciDumasInsightTrainingForPhotographers Website: www.lucidumascoaching.com Email: luci@lucidumas.com Show: http://www.theprofitablephotographerpodcast.com LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/luci-dumas

Computer Talk with TAB
Computer Talk: Congress or Criminal Mugshots? (5/25/19) - Part 2

Computer Talk with TAB

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2019 38:17


Cloud-based backup service Crash Plan stops backing up certain types of backup files, leaving customers stranded. A caller asks about a recent Microsoft update for older Windows systems (Windows 7 and earlier.) This security update is necessary to stop a possible future virus attack. Millions of financial records exposed on First American Financial website, says a computer security journalist. A Windows 10 laptop user has problems keeping Firefox as the default browser. A listener wonders if Norton Antivirus can be used with Malwarebytes, plus tries to recover from a hacked PayPal account. Snapchat employees spied on users with an internal tool meant for law enforcement use. Department of Homeland Security warns that software used in Chinese-made drones may be stealing data or used to install malware on networks. A tech-savvy listener provides a possible solution of installing Ubuntu Linux on older computers that cannot run the latest Windows software. We help a caller with set-up questions with OpenDNS on a router. Configuring OpenDNS can help you surf the web more safely. A caller with a doorbell camera tries to find a solution that will work with the camera at lower Internet speeds without having to upgrade his speed with his Internet provider.

noobs // a NetworkChuck Podcast
UNLIMITED CLOUD STORAGE - Synology + Crashplan - $10/month

noobs // a NetworkChuck Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2019 16:26


Unlimited Cloud Storage for $10 a month using Synology DS1019+ and Crashplan. Synology NAS DS1019+: https://amzn.to/2E9Btnd NAS Hard Drives: https://amzn.to/2LHufgd CrashPlan Pro $10/month: http://bit.ly/30px0pE Noble Coyote Coffee: http://bit.ly/2VrgrpJ

Fare SMART
Fai il backup e fallo bene (ti spiego come)

Fare SMART

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 10:09


Perchè è importante fare il backup, come va fatto e quale strumento ti consiglio.Altri podcast e contatti► https://www.officine.me/Backstage ed extra su Telegram► https://www.officine.me/telegramScrivimi► https://www.officine.me/scrivimiCrea un podcast che spacca con Audacity► https://www.officine.me/audacity### NOTE, LINK E RISORSE ###► https://www.crashplan.com/### UN GRANDISSIMO GRAZIE ###Ai finanziatori del Podcast: Stefano Salvoni (Webkarma), Nicolò Bernardi, Massimo Manoni (Nui Aku), Alessio Furlan (Tecnica Fotografica), Elena Bizzotto (La Salute Sorride), Pietro Capozzi (Tutto quello che mi passa per la mente), Francesco Richichi (Surf-VHDL), Daniele Di Mauro (DDMFotografia), Max Saggia (tennisMySelf), Renato Ligas (Around the Game), Paolo Corradeghini (3dMetrica), Sandro Ghini (Mettiamoci la Voce), Kapogeek (Esperienze Digitali), Angelo Ricci (Sognatori Svegli), Leonarda Vanicelli (Lavoro Meglio), Teresa Piliego (I Luoghi della Comunicazione), Alessandro Bari (Elettricista Felice), Patrizia Sica, Claudio Menzani (Blockchain Italia), Stefano Duepuntozero (Ascoltare Podcast), Matteo Piazzalunga (Passione Sceneggiatura), Ilario Sabbadini (Briciole di Previdenza), Riccardo Mancinelli (Refacturing), Chiara Lorenzi (Denti sani e bianchi), Marco Leasi (Cose belle da sapere), Don Domenico Bruno (Letto tra le righe), Giovanni Aricò (Crescere con tuo figlio) e tutti gli altri!

game computers telegram backup audacity perch backstage bene voce altri comunicazione fallo crescere bernardi spiego crashplan previdenza elena bizzotto la salute sorride daniele di mauro ddmfotografia riccardo mancinelli refacturing pietro capozzi tutto ilario sabbadini briciole chiara lorenzi denti patrizia sica claudio menzani blockchain italia massimo manoni nui aku francesco richichi surf vhdl max saggia tennismyself renato ligas around sandro ghini mettiamoci marco leasi cose don domenico bruno letto leonarda vanicelli lavoro meglio teresa piliego i luoghi stefano duepuntozero ascoltare podcast podcast stefano salvoni webkarma un grandissimo grazie ai kapogeek esperienze digitali angelo ricci sognatori svegli telegramscrivimi scrivimicrea
Fireside Swift
EP 77 - CRASH PLAN FOR LIFE

Fireside Swift

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2019 85:46


Show Notes:* Sean’s video on delegation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBWu6TnhLeY&t=2s * Andrew Bancroft’s articles on delegation: - http://www.andrewcbancroft.com/2015/03/26/what-is-delegation-a-swift-developers-guide/ - https://www.andrewcbancroft.com/2015/04/08/how-delegation-works-a-swift-developer-guide/ * Use Your Loaf: https://useyourloaf.com/blog/quick-guide-to-swift-delegates/ * Kilo Loco’s “Use Closures Not Delegate”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vST4UN4s1kg Sponsors:* Sentry $100 credit (only for new accounts): https://sentry.io/signup/?code=firesideswift Fireside Swift Theme song by Mike “Golden Pipes” DillinghamBlind Love Dub by Jeris (c) copyright 2017 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/VJ_Memes/55416 Ft: Kara Square (mindmapthat)

digitalSoup
Episode 092 Is Google Seeing ghosts Can Amish Darth Vader beat Evil Chucky

digitalSoup

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 82:04


More Google Spectre issues and there's a fix, but at what cost? Is your cloud backup strategy up to date? We've got you covered! Then you won't want to miss our great interview with Jake Ilika about his #MusicandMemory project! Plus Amish Darth Vader battles an Evil Chucky doll, who will win?! All this and more in this week's episode! Google's Spectre Fix Increases Chrome RAM Usage by 10 Percent A new round of Spectre flaws have appeared, but Google is in the process of adding functionality to desktop Chrome that will block remote execution of Spectre. The downside, however, is Chrome will use even more RAM than it already does. Google v67 build of Chrome contains a feature called Site Isolation to combat Spectre attacks. Site Isolation makes Spectre attacks less dangerous by using a separate renderer for each domain. Enforcing Site Isolation comes with a drawback, though. Using a separate renderer for every domain means more active renderers, and thus, more memory usage. Update to Cloud Backup Storage Options Now that Carbonite has Crashplan for Home what are some of the best options out there for individuals to have secure cloud backup these days? Anchor vs. Reporter On-Air Fight This is the infamous on-air fight between Jim Ryan and Dick Oliver on Fox 5's Good Day New York on July 19, 2001. Google Lens ... the stealthy Xerox machine! What is this madness? Copy and paste text from the real world?

The Savvy Business Method
Ecommerce Data Storage and System Security

The Savvy Business Method

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2018 16:55


Episode 005: Ecommerce Data Storage and System Security   Episode Summary:  As small owners our livelihoods depend on securing our data and protecting critical systems such as access to the backend of our website, email service provider, etc. In this episode Julie discuss the various options available for storing and backing up data as well as issues surrounding securing critical systems.   Episode Links: My scanner: http://a.co/d/fYWAVOs https://www.dropbox.com/ https://www.box.com/ https://gsuite.google.com/ https://www.crashplan.com https://www.lastpass.com/ https://keepass.info/ https://1password.com/ Authenticator App for iOS: goo.gl/i6JDMp  Authenticator App for Android: goo.gl/LiRfRs    Episode Transcript: Announcer: Are you looking to take your online business to the next level? Well, you're in the right place. Welcome to The Savvy Business Method, with your host, Julie Feickert.   Julie Feickert: Hello and welcome to Episode 5 of The Savvy Business Method podcast, where we talk about how to plan, start, and grow your small business online. I'm Julie Feickert, and my goal is to help you build practical business skills so you can provide a better life for your family. A quick reminder that my YouTube Channel is available, and I have a bunch of short videos up there, so if you're looking for some quick tips and tricks head on over to YouTube and be sure to subscribe so you're notified of all the new videos because there are so many more coming. Now, for today's topic we're going to be talking about data storage and protecting systems. Doesn't this sound exciting? This is the episode where you are going to find out that I am a total nerd. But I hope this is useful to you, because as small business owners we need to be really thoughtful about how we store our data and how we protect our systems because it really is a point of potential liability for us. Think about this: Have you ever stopped to consider what would happen if tomorrow you woke up and were missing your order data? So you had no idea who had placed an order on your website. What if your inventory tracking sheet disappeared? Would you have time to go through and recount all of your inventory, and go back through all your reporting and recreate all your projections? Or what about that truly nightmare scenario. What would happen if your site was corrupted and there was no way to recover the data and you had to start all over? What would that look like? How many sales would you lose? How much of your sanity would you lose? As much as being an entrepreneur can be this awesome experience, there are some downsides, right? In a corporation there would be a department that's responsible for data storage and security and there would be people who had gone to school for data security making the decisions. But when you're a small business owner, the decisions fall to you. So I want to talk with you today about the things you need to be concerned about when it comes to data storage and protection. I've been doing this a long time; I've made my share of mistakes, I've seen other people make their share of mistakes and I'd like to save you some pain and suffering. So maybe grab a glass of wine and sit back and let's dive in. Okay, let's start the discussion by talking about what we should be storing and how. Now, I am going to tell you up front that I am a huge fan of keeping copies of keeping copies of pretty much everything related to your business. They're very few exceptions. You should keep every invoice, every form you fill out, every screenshot if you register with online systems, that sort of thing. Everything should be kept, well-filed, and easily accessible. That sounds like so much work, doesn't it? Let me give you a few tips here: I would strongly suggest that you invest is a really good scanner, the type that feeds paper, not the type that lift up that you have to lay a paper down. This thing is going to be your best friend. I will link to the one I have in the show notes but I'll tell you up front it is definitely not the cheapest option, I'm sure there are different ones available. I just happened to have had this one for 7 or 8 years and it has just kept on kicking and done a great job for me so I feel like I should definitely link to it but know that it is definitely one of the more costly ones. It feeds fifty pages at a time; it's just super easy to use. I would suggest that you try to make scanning your paperwork something you do a couple times a week. Once you get in the habit of this, it'll take you a couple of minutes, you'll name all your files, you'll get them into folders, and then when something happens, I guarantee you something will happen on like a Tuesday afternoon at 4:00, where you have to find a piece of paper, and it'll be right there for you. It's so much easier; it takes so much stress of your life to be able to find what you need quickly. Now, having told you you should keep everything, I do need to disclaim something here: When it comes to other people's personal data, and I'm talking about things like birthdays and social security numbers, specifically the types of data you end up having a hold of when you hire people, that information you should not be keeping long term, and you'll want to check with your local small business attorney so you can determine from like a state level what your liability there is, but in general I try to follow the rule that I don't keep people's personal information for longer than 12 months once they've stopped working for me. That just limits your liability in case your data were to be stolen, okay? So I just wanted to throw out that there is that one exception to not keeping everything, but you know like everything else? You've got to keep it. Okay, so where are you keeping all of this data? It's a lot, right? Wait until you start doing videos or podcasts, then you're going to have so much data you're not going to know what to do with it. But, you know, we have to balance a few things as entrepreneurs. One of the biggest priorities when it comes to storing our data ends up being accessibility. How quickly can I get the files that I need so that I can get my work done? Can I get to my files form my cell phone or on my laptop or on my desktop so that I can pull up things quickly and get my work done? Okay, so in terms of storage options, the big ones that I see most small businesses using and I have used myself include DropBox, Box.com, Google for Business. The nice thing about these platforms for storing data is that they're generally accessible form just about everywhere, and so you always have access to your files and you can get your work done from wherever you happen to be. The thing to understand when you're using a system like this that's based on a cloud structure so your information is sitting on servers in some warehouse somewhere is that some third party systems are not generally backed up. That's not part of the service that's being provided. Also be sure to read the fine print. Generally speaking, third party systems don't guarantee your data will be safe. Things like security breaches, and corruption of the data where the data's lost, those are all risks you generally just take using a third party service. But, understand I am not knocking on these services. They are amazing for accessibility. I'm just pointing out that you really need to be thoughtful about backing up your data and backing it up regularly. Now, backing up your data generally means making at least one backup copy that is stored in a different location, personally I do this every day but you can do it a couple of times a week or once a week, It just kind of depends on how much data you're generating. I will tell you that redundant backups are best, this is when you back up from, say, DropBox to a server in your house, and then you back up that server to an off-site backup situation like CrashPlan or something like that, in fact that's the system that we personally use for our companies. Because that way, if something goes wrong, I always have a couple of different copies that I can go back to. Now there are a couple of good backup solutions out there. If you're talking about trying to back up a copy just on a different computer, but in your home or your office, you can use an external hard drive, just use a separate computer, you can use a Network Area Storage device or a server if you want to get a little bit fancier. All those options start at like $80 dollars, so they're not terribly expensive, and if you're going to be generating a lot of information, or as your business is really generating revenue, I'd encourage you to make that investment so that you have this set up and can be all the time. Now, if you want to talk about off-site backups, there's a couple of options available. If you're mainly storing files on your computer you certainly could back up to a third party service, like DropBox, or Google Business, and so if one of those two things fails, you should have another copy availble. I did mention CrashPlan; that's who we personally have used for years. I really like CrashPlan, they're affordable, they have an excellent reputation for not losing data, and that's really important to me. In terms of a potential free option, I have in the past, mainly for personal and stuff, not as much for business, but if you have a friend maybe in another city or state who would be willing to do a nightly exchange of data, we used to send all of our personal stuff to our friend's server in their home, every couple of days, and they would send their stuff to us, and at one point that saved some really important pictures, that would have otherwise been lost. So, that's a free option, maybe not the most secure thing ever, but it is something to consider. Okay, so hopefully you're now getting some ideas on how it is you're going to back up your data regularly and make sure you keep copies of everything. So let's move on and talk more about system security. Now, number one thing in terms of system security because you're going to be running a lot of systems as a small business owner, right? You have your website, you have your Email Service Provider, you have your Google accounts, you have your main email server that's handling like your business email, I mean there's a lot of things that could be potentially be broken into and damaged caused. So, the first thing you need to worry about is having different secure passwords for every single system and I know that sounds so elementary but you would not believe how many people are still working on insecure passwords. So let's just do a quick review. Every single system you have, every single time you are asked for new password, you should be creating a unique password that is long, like at least 12 characters, it should include upper and lower case letters, numbers, symbols, you want a nice combination going on. Now, of course, if this is something that you're new to in creating unique passwords, these long secure unique passwords, you're probably having a panic moment right now, right? Because how are you going to remember all these passwords? I would really encourage you, every small business owner needs to have a subscription to a password manager. Something like LastPass, or 1Password, or Keeper, or KeePass, there's a ton of these out there. They're very secure; you get to basically have a password to log in and you'll want to make a secure password there but hopefully you can remember one secure password on your own, and these systems keep everything secure and they just make it so much easier to have great passwords for everything single one of your systems. They're also really inexpensive; most of the time they're like two or three dollars a month. So this is well worth your time and your money to get this, get a subscription and get it set up. I would just put a warning out to you because we own businesses, right? And we need to make sure if something happens to us that our businesses stay functioning so they can continue to support our families, if you have someone who would be the executor of your estate, you probably want to have some information somewhere so that they can get into your password manager so when in the event something happens to you, and I hate to be fatalistic but we all need to be thinking about that, they'd be able to get access to your systems to keep your business running. Okay, next up let's talk about accessing systems in general. Because even with all of your secure passwords there are still some things you need to be thinking about in terms of how easy your systems are to access. Now, one, you need to make sure all of your devices are also password protected, your laptop, your phone, your tablet. All of these devices should not be easy to break into. Because, I mean, let's face it. We all know someone or maybe we've done it ourselves where we've left, like, our phone in a public restroom, you don't want someone to immediately be able to get access to say, your website, or lock you out, or to get access to your email system and send spam email, something like that. And there are a number of things you can do to prevent that, you can secure your devices with passwords, some brands are obviously better than other for that, you can use what's called Authenticator, which will come up and ask you for a separate authentication, normally it is sending a text to your cell phone with a number so that you have to have that to log in to your systems. I would also put out a warning to you that you want to make sure you are only accessing password-protected systems over secure wireless. This is something that I just cannot overstate; actually I know of a situation where a company lost a whole bunch of money out of their bank account because their bookkeeper was accessing their bank account over an unsecure wireless connection. And, the general rule of thumb here is if you did not secure that wireless connection yourself, or you don't know what you're doing, you need to assume that your wireless connection is not secure. So don't go to Starbucks or any coffee shop, not dissing on Starbucks, but don't go to a coffee shop and access your bank account, okay? That's just not a good plan at all. Also know that if you lose money out of your business bank account, your bank doesn't have to put it back and they won't. So, this is your incentive. Just be careful. Also if you travel a lot, like I used to do a ton of traveling for work for a while there, I had a subscription to a Virtual Private Network. And that's how I accessed systems like in the evening is my hotel room I would go to my Virtual Private Network, and then I could use the hotel's Wi-Fi, and I was able to access my system securely. So there's a bunch of things that you can do. This is just about changing your mindset, and thinking about what would happen if someone was able to get access to my systems. Okay, now at some point odds are good your business is going to grow and you're going to be in a position where you need to give access to secure systems to other people. Whether it's hiring a virtual assistant, or maybe your developer who's working on your website or, maybe you start hiring employees. And so this is going to take some special thought and set up on your part. So, the number one rule I have is do not give employees, contractors, anyone access to administrative accounts. And by administrative account I mean anything where they can get in, and do significant damage and particularly anything they can get into where they could delete you as a user. So you think about if you give access to an employee and they can delete you out of the account, or delete your user out of the account, they can get control over whatever it is you're working on. And, you know, we all want to be able to trust people but the reality is that sometimes, things go sour, and we need to be protecting ourselves and our businesses. You really want to only give employees and contractors and other people as much access as absolutely necessary to accomplish their tasks. Now the good news is this has gotten a lot easier over the last few years because of these password systems that are available now. So for example, I use LastPass to not only secure my personal passwords, and then my husband and I share passwords, because, you know, we ultimately have two companies that we're running, and then I am also able to set up other users so if we have an employee or a contractor, I can give access for them in LastPass, and I can give them a password to access LastPass, and if for some reason I need to take their access away, I am doing that through my LastPass account, okay? So I'm able to, let's say they quit, or I have to terminate their employment, I am able to terminate access to one system, and they no longer have access to any of the systems. It's amazing. I cannot even begin to tell you the difference this makes for a small business owner, it used to be if you let somebody go, you had to sit there and go "Oh man, which systems did they have access to and how do I lock them out of all these systems?" Now it's a matter of changing their access to one system. So definitely make sure you've got these kinds of systems set up before you think about hiring anyone. Okay, well I've given you a lot to chew on today. You know, data protection isn't really that difficult, it's just about getting your systems set up and being thoughtful about doing the basic maintenance and kind of getting into that new mindset. Yeah as I said, I'm human and I've made my share of mistakes as a business owner, I have seen other people make mistakes, and some of which were fairly disastrous but I just don't want to see bad things happen to you or your business. Okay, if you have feedback or ideas for future shows you can find me at savvybusinessmethod.com as well as on Facebook and YouTube. Please be sure to hit that little subscribe button in iTunes or Stitcher so you don't miss an episode, and of course, I would greatly appreciate if you could rate and review this podcast in iTunes. It really does help other people find it, and I love reading the reviews. I just get some sweet lovely reviews and I am so thankful for them. I'll be back in your feed in a few days and until then, hey, go secure your data! Bye for now!   Announcer: Thanks so much for listening to this episode of The Savvy Business Method with Julie Feickert. If you enjoyed today's episode please leave a review and subscribe, and for more great content and to stay up to date, visit savvybusinessmethod.com, and Savvy Business Method on Facebook. We'll catch you next time.   Episode 005: Ecommerce Data Storage and System Security  

Accidental Tech Podcast
286: I Respect a Good Crust

Accidental Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2018 116:16


Pre-show: John's pie-filled vacation John's seemingly impossible picture Follow-up: CrashPlan, John, and Java java mx java mx {newNumber}m SpiderOak BackBlaze BackBlaze B2 Arq John's Photo books DiskInventoryX DaisyDisk Photo printer's extension AMD and TSMC and 7nm DigitalFoundry on the Intel Core i9 9900K Some Neutral FU about the Golf R Apple removes Infowars propoganda from its podcast directory Marco started it Gruber investigates @jack's tweetstorm Compulsory xkcd comic #askatp: Dock strategies (via Fabian Diehm) Sleep strategies (via Cecil Scheib) Transmission strategies (via Thomas Brock) Post-show Neutral: Tesla screws up a good thing Sponsored by: Hover: Find a domain name for your passion. Get 10% off your first purchase. Betterment: Rethink what your money can do. Get up to 1 year managed free. Squarespace: Make your next move. Enter code ATP for 10% off your first order.

The Life Story Coach
24: Candus Kampfer on Bookkeeping and Quickbooks for Life Story Professionals

The Life Story Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2018 48:44


Bookkeeping woes? Keep it simple. Candus Kampfer wanted to make a difference. When her hair stylist cried with relief after Candus showed her how to pull her accounting reports, Candus knew she wanted to help others. She began making short, focused video tutorials about Quickbooks in 2014, and her following grew. Candus big message: keep it simple. It doesn't need to be overcomplicated. But remember that bookkeeping is a vital part of your business. It's not just for doing taxes! Track the numbers throughout the year. Numbers are a black and white way to view your business. How to get started? Start by opening a business bank account; don't co-mingle your personal and business expenses! Keep records on paper: Use columns to designate expense categories, e.g fuel, office supplies, meals and entertainment [Hint: keep the categories fairly broad]. Or use an Excel spreadsheet to track your numbers   There are three types of reports you should be pulling: 1) Profit and Loss the top--your income, what you're being paid from your clients, based on categories of products or services below--all of your business expenses bottom line: did you make a profit or take a loss for the time frame chosen Questions to consider when looking at the P&L report: Have you been making an income in the areas you expected to? Are you making  more income in one area over another (e.g. producing books vs. producing audios)? Keep track of your expenses; where is your money going, and how does the outgo compare to the income? Compare a date range to a previous date range, e.g. this month vs last month. 2) The balance sheet All assets, all liabilities, all equity, and your net worth (Hint: The net should match the number on your P&L if you chose the same end date). The balance sheet is a snapshot of your business at a particular moment. 3) Sales by Item Summary (this report is specific to Quickbooks) For creating invoices within Quickbooks, use "items"; items are more detailed than the categories on your P&L. These items give details on the services and products you provide. It will show you the income you're generating on this specific services and products, and their percentage of the overall income. Knowing this allows you to proactively guide the business in the direction you want it to go. For example, you may see you need to do some marketing to grow a particular area. How to determine profitability in a service-based business Add a value to your time tracking Set up a non0payroll item with your service item and cost   I use Toggl for time tracking. For most of us, the free version is fine—it's what I used for years. I only upgraded to the paid version when I wanted to start drilling down into the statistics of how I was spending my time. To get your effective hourly rate, you have to track all business-related hours worked, not just billable time. Quickbooks: for each customer, you can enter billable AND non-billable time. When you go into Profit & Loss by job and by customer, it tracks the costs for you without counting it as income.   The entrepreneur's struggle: understanding the value of your work What would I like to earn? How much time do I have to work per month? Being confident with your billing comes over time. Kind, loving praise from clients helps!   Discomfort with invoicing (whether it's on your end or your client's) can be alleviated by stating things clearly in writing. Trust your gut feeling on whether it's a good match between you and a potential client.   Routine bookkeeping tasks Download or manually enter your bank transactions Enter expenses Track your income Reconcile bank and credit card accounts If using desktop version, back up your Quickbooks to an external drive (or any accounting software) [Hint: Do not use Dropbox to back up Quickbooks] Pulling reports P&L, pull it every month and compare YTD or month-to-month; are you where you want to be? Balance sheet, pull every quarter or so to make sure everytyhing looks Sales by item summary, pull every month. This gives a breakdown of your income and where it's coming from   Links Candus has a free minicourse on how to get started with Quickbooks in under an hour (canduskampfer.com/minicourse). Confidence with Quickbooks Course Quickbooks Simplified Community What I use to back up my data: Crashplan for Small Business Toshiba external hard drives for Mac (with Time Machine) (here's a model that works with PCs)   Whenever you're learning something new, be patient and kind with yourself. It can be overwhelming!   If you're interested in helping your clients learn about their genetic genealogy, keep an eye open for a special sale on the 23andme kits. They may be offered at a reduced price during Amazon's Prime Day. It starts at midnight on July 16, 2018 and runs for just 36 hours.   Please consider leaving a review (or just a rating) on iTunes. Thanks for helping to spread the word! Now go out and save someone's story.

fotopodcast.de (News und Tipps rund um die Fotografie)
FPC201 - Von Alphamännchen und Blitzlichtern

fotopodcast.de (News und Tipps rund um die Fotografie)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2018 140:12


Themen: - Willkommen - Housekeeping mit Neufi - Auphonic-Spende von Someone - Drohne als "Lichtstativ" - Godox Blitze: Mikrosat.de - "15%OFF" - Speedlite 470EX-AI - GRATIS: Die Cleverprinting-Downloads - Makro-Ringe im Praxistest - Hörerfrage von Michaela: Backup-Lösung für Urlaub - Firmware-Update für die Nikon D810 - Jan Irmscher: Drucker, die letzte - Online-Backup: Backblaze, Crashplan, IDrive usw. - Bye bye Canon, hello Sony Ich habe getan, ab sofort bin ich ein alpha-Männchen... Erster Eindruck - Ebay, Kleinanzeigen und Facebook-Verkauf Seiten.... - Lichtstarkes Sigma 105-Millimeter-Objektiv - Performance-Update für LR Classic CC 7.2 - OPAL - Preset-Slider für LR - Sigma bringt 9 E-Mount Objektive - 9. Fürstenecker Fototage - Kickstarter für Gimbal Kylin M: 3-axis stabilizer for lightweight cameras - How colour contamination may be ruining your photographs and how to fix it - Gewinnspiel Folge 200 - nochmals erinnert und erklärt. - Was hast du in den letzten 4 Wochen fotografiert?

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn
TechByter Worldwide 2018-03-04: Is Your Computer Being Used to Mine Cryptocurrency? Short Circuits. Spare Parts.

TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2018 18:38


Some websites use visitors' computers to mine cryptocurrencies. That may be OK if the user is told about it and given a choice, but that's often not the case. In Short Circuits: Last call for Net Neutrality. The FCC has published the rule that destroys Net Neutrality and now fewer than 60 Congressional Days remain if the legislature is to reverse this misguided rule. CrashPlan from Code42 has just received a new user interface that improves the utility's operation. Regardless of which browser is your favorite, it can be improved with a variety of themes, add-ons, and extensions. In Spare Parts (only on the website): If you're in the business of renting to millennials or young families, you'd better be sure that you have high-speed internet access and offer the ability to make rental payments on-line. • Among the predictions made at this week's Mobile World Congress in Taiwan is one that suggests we'll soon see humanoid robots in our homes. Some, in fact, already exist.

netucated
71 – nur noch die Sonne zeichnen, fertig

netucated

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2018 123:17


Hallo ihr Halunken*innen, heute Foto- und Nerdthemen für alle laktoseintoleranten Menschen. Wir sprechen über Emmentaler, Saftpressen, 7 Minuten nach Mitternacht, Datensicherungsnerdtalk, Crashplan und Backblaze, Lightroom Performance, Slideshows bei Pixieset und Animes. Bis nächste Woche, tschüssi.   Zeug über das wir in der Folge sprechen: leckerer Emmentaler Käse* eine tolle Saftpresse* Drobo 5C, Marvs Raidsystem*   […] Der Beitrag 71 – nur noch die Sonne zeichnen, fertig erschien zuerst auf netucated.

Self Care is Sexy
Episode 44: Holiday Crash Plan

Self Care is Sexy

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2017 29:32


The holidays are upon us, and it's time to prepare with a little bit of self-care! A few new ideas to get you through whats sure to be a busy next few months. I also have some self-care tips for travel;Pack a Self-Care kitPack way ahead of time Wear comfy clotheshave comfort items handy; noise canceling headphones, eye masks, hand lotion, chap stick, and water.Catch up on some readingTry to sleepJournaling time  Take BreaksDo what you are doing Pick one thing Simplify the meals.Sleep DelegateMaster joyFind spaceVolunteerStick to fit! Ditch the Dress Up

Fast Talking
190: Encryption and Backup: Aaron Traffas

Fast Talking

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2017 9:19


Auction professionals spend a lot of time working on their laptops and never know when disaster might strike. In this episode, host Aaron Traffas looks at preventative measures that can save both time and stress when, not if, a computer is broken or stolen. Subscribe on iTunes | Google Play | Stitcher Today’s SponsorsGlobal Auction Guide Episode Linkshttp://www.auctioneertech.com The Fast Talking Podcast is a small business building podcast as seen through the lens of auctioneers and auction professionals. Focusing on social media, marketing strategies, finance, operations, human resources, and time management, we provide focused discussions on important topics weekly. ----- Episode 190: Transcription Hello and welcome to the  Fast Talking Podcast. My name is Aaron Traffas and I'm excited to once again be your guest host for today's episode. We auctioneers store large amounts of important and sensitive information on our laptops. What happens to our work if our computer is broken or, worse, stolen? We'll examine two crucial preventative measures that will save us both time and stress in just a moment after a word from our sponsor. [sponsor] I wrote the article that inspired this episode recently for the Colorado Auctioneers Association quarterly newsletter which, this quarter, is focused on technology. After making sure we're using strong passwords, which was the topic of my last appearance on the Fast Talking Podcast, I feel that backup and encryption are the two next steps auctioneers need to make as we strive to make sure our data is secure and our work is safe.   It was 2007. NAA Conference and Show was in San Diego. My bags were packed in my truck. I swung by the office to grab my computer and other electronics that I'd need for the week in California. As I walked out the door for my two hour drive from Manhattan, Kansas, to the Kansas City airport, I realized I'd forgotten something. I sat my computer bag on the ground next to my pickup's passenger door and went back inside. When I returned, I got in my truck, cranked the wheel to the left and backed out, only to realize that my front tire just rolled over my laptop bag. My computer — and my mood — was crushed. I had unfinished work for upcoming auctions that I'd planned to do on the plane and I had no time before my flight to prep another computer. It made for an interesting and uncomfortable trip. Broken hardware is one thing, but what if I'd lost the computer? What if instead of picking up pieces off the ground, I was instead unsure of where it was? Had it fallen into malicious hands? Were all the accounts that I'd logged in to now at risk of being compromised? It's always better to know a computer is destroyed than to wonder if someone is combing through the data. The scenario is simple — at any time, you can suddenly lose your laptop. In order to make sure that the only cost to you is the value of the hardware, it's crucial that your computer is encrypted and backed up properly. Encryption Computer encryption can get very technical very quickly, but for our purposes it simply means a way of scrambling the data on the computer's hard drive so it can't be read by anyone who doesn't have the password. The password to login to Windows isn't enough, as it's fairly trivial to bypass. The correct solution is called full disk encryption, where everything on the computer is encrypted for everyone who doesn't have the password. For many years, the right answer for encryption was a product called TrueCrypt. It was free software and the encryption was bulletproof. A few years ago, the TrueCrypt project closed down. Luckily it's successor, called VeraCrypt, is also free and based on much of the same code base as TrueCrypt. Since it's open source, third parties have been able to audit the software to make sure there aren't backdoors or other ways for criminals or governments to bypass the encryption. Operating systems have their own versions of encryption. Windows has BitLocker and Apple has FileVault. While I'll always prefer a free and open source solution over one from an operating system provider, these solutions may be a good fit in some situations. Many modern laptops also provide built-in encryption options on the hardware level. Many of these might work as well as VeraCrypt, though there's no way to guarantee there isn't a backdoor. Sometimes, a laptop's password simply prevents the laptop from booting up and doesn't actually encrypt the data. This means someone could simply remove the hard drive and put it in another computer to access your files. Make sure if you're using a built-in password function on your laptop that it's actually encrypting the data. Only by using full disk encryption can you rest assured that if your computer falls into the wrong hands, all your data about your auctions, customers, clients and personal accounts won't be at risk. Entering a password every time you boot your computer is a small price to pay for that peace of mind. Backup Encryption prevents the bad guys from getting your data, but what about losing your work? If you drive over your laptop with the front wheel of a diesel pickup, how do you get your files off of a hard drive that's in pieces on the ground? In addition to the possibility of losing your computer, new viruses called ransomware actually encrypt your files and make you pay a ransom before giving you the key to decrypt them. A good backup solution can mitigate a ransomware infection by allowing you to restore the unencrypted versions of your files. There is a frequently recited rule of backup called 3-2-1. You need three copies of your data, on two different mediums and one needs to be offsite. Simply buying an external hard drive and copying your files there is better than nothing, but it's also grossly insufficient and inefficient. A good backup solution will run continually in the background, copying versions of  your files offsite as you create them, so you don't notice it until you need it. In much the way that TrueCrypt was the best answer for encryption, there was also a best answer for backup called Crashplan. Crashplan allowed users to backup to friends for free. I wrote on my AuctioneerTech blog in 2012 how this was a perfect backup solution that didn't have a monthly fee like most of the backup services. Unfortunately, a few weeks ago, Crashplan  announced that it's discontinuing its free version in October 2018. While I've been hunting for a replacement, it's unlikely that anything will be as simple as Crashplan to use without a monthly fee. There are still myriad subscription backup services. Some of the best known are Carbonite, Backblaze and Mozy, and each has a different pricing plan based on the amount of data to store and how many computers will be using the service. As you shop around for the best  deal, pay attention to the cost to get your data back. In 2011, I lost 2 terabytes of data that was backed up with Mozy. Only then did I learn that they charged $.50 per gigabyte to restore the data, and I had to come up with the $1000 within 30 days before my files were deleted. In the auction business, like any business, time is money. Some backup solution is better than nothing. In my search for a Crashplan replacement, I've found a lot of negative comments about Carbonite and a lot of positive comments about Backblaze, so if I were looking for a simple turn-key subscription backup service, I'd probably start with Backblaze. Wrap-up In summary, disaster happens when we least expect it. We need to take steps now to ensure that when, not if, we lose a computer, it might cost us money to replace the device but it doesn't cost us time to recreate all our work or, worse, cost us sleep worrying about who might have our data and what he or she might be doing with it. And now, here's a word from our sponsor. [sponsor] I'd like to thank Andy for giving me the opportunity to guest host the Fast Talking Podcast this week. The show is built for you, the fast talking nation. We're always looking for suggestions and feedback, so if you have an idea for great topic or guest you think would be a good fit, leave a comment on  fasttalkingpodcast.com or find us @auctionpodcast on Twitter or facebook.com/fasttalkingpodcast. My blog is auctioneertech.com and if you'd like to contact me personally, find me on Twitter @traffas or, better yet, email aaron.traffas@purplewave.com With that, we want to thank you  for gifting us with your time. As always, be sure to like, favorite and share this podcast in whichever venue you choose to listen. We enjoy creating this podcast for you and strive to share this industry we love with more and more people each week. I'm Aaron Traffas. Thanks for listening. Now go sell something.

MSP on Deck Podcast
6 - Wooing Amazon HQ2, Twin Cities Startup Week 2017, and Code42's destiny

MSP on Deck Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2017 51:26


Riffing points Should we pursue Amazon HQ2? -- for more see: MN news on Amazon HQ2 Twin Cities Startup Week and what’s in store -- for more see: news on MSPBJ Code42 whacks CrashPlan -- for more see story on MSPBJ Can Code42 iPO? - for more see: news on Code42 New startup Bind launched by serial founder Tony Miller -- for more, see: story on MSPBJ Follow us at www.twitter.com/mspondeck so that you don’t miss the latest episodes in which we may talk about you

BSD Now
213: The French CONnection

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2017 91:00


We recap EuroBSDcon in Paris, tell the story behind a pf PR, and show you how to do screencasting with OpenBSD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines Recap of EuroBSDcon 2017 in Paris, France (https://2017.eurobsdcon.org) EuroBSDcon was held in Paris, France this year, which drew record numbers this year. With over 300 attendees, it was the largest BSD event I have ever attended, and I was encouraged by the higher than expected number of first time attendees. The FreeBSD Foundation held a board meeting on Wednesday afternoon with the members who were in Paris. Topics included future conferences (including a conference kit we can mail to people who want to represent FreeBSD) and planning for next year. The FreeBSD Devsummit started on Thursday at the beautiful Mozilla Office in Paris. After registering and picking up our conference bag, everyone gathered for a morning coffee with lots of handshaking and greeting. We then gathered in the next room which had a podium with microphone, screens as well as tables and chairs. After developers sat down, Benedict opened the devsummit with a small quiz about France for developers to win a Mogics Power Bagel (https://www.mogics.com/?page_id=3824). 45 developers participated and DES won the item in the end. After introductions and collecting topics of interest from everyone, we started with the Work in Progress (WIP) session. The WIP session had different people present a topic they are working on in 7 minute timeslots. Topics ranged from FreeBSD Forwarding Performance, fast booting options, and a GELI patch under review to attach multiple providers. See their slides on the FreeBSD wiki (https://wiki.freebsd.org/DevSummit/201709). After lunch, the FreeBSD Foundation gave a general update on staff and funding, as well as a more focused presentation about our partnership with Intel. People were interested to hear what was done so far and asked a few questions to the Intel representative Glenn Weinberg. After lunch, developers worked quietly on their own projects. The mic remained open and occasionally, people would step forward and gave a short talk without slides or motivated a discussion of common interest. The day concluded with a dinner at a nice restaurant in Paris, which allowed to continue the discussions of the day. The second day of the devsummit began with a talk about the CAM-based SDIO stack by Ilya Bakulin. His work would allow access to wifi cards/modules on embedded boards like the Raspberry Pi Zero W and similar devices as many of these are using SDIO for data transfers. Next up was a discussion and Q&A session with the FreeBSD core team members who were there (missing only Benno Rice, Kris Moore, John Baldwin, and Baptiste Daroussin, the latter being busy with conference preparations). The new FCP (FreeBSD community proposals) were introduced for those who were not at BSDCan this year and the hows and whys about it. Allan and I were asked to describe our experiences as new members of core and we encouraged people to run for core when the next election happens. After a short break, Scott Long gave an overview of the work that's been started on NUMA (Non-Uniform Memory Architecture), what the goals of the project are and who is working on it. Before lunch, Christian Schwarz presented his work on zrepl, a new ZFS replication solution he developed using Go. This sparked interest in developers, a port was started (https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12462) and people suggested to Christian that he should submit his talk to AsiaBSDcon and BSDCan next year. Benedict had to leave before lunch was done to teach his Ansible tutorial (which was well attended) at the conference venue. There were organized dinners, for those two nights, quite a feat of organization to fit over 100 people into a restaurant and serve them quickly. On Saturday, there was a social event, a river cruise down the Seine. This took the form of a ‘standing' dinner, with a wide selection of appetizer type dishes, designed to get people to walk around and converse with many different people, rather than sit at a table with the same 6-8 people. I talked to a much larger group of people than I had managed to at the other dinners. I like having both dinner formats. We would also like to thank all of the BSDNow viewers who attended the conference and made the point of introducing themselves to us. It was nice to meet you all. The recordings of the live video stream from the conference are available immediately, so you can watch the raw versions of the talks now: Auditorium Keynote 1: Software Development in the Age of Heroes (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=179) by Thomas Pornin (https://twitter.com/BearSSLnews) Tuning FreeBSD for routing and firewalling (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=1660) by Olivier Cochard-Labbé (https://twitter.com/ocochardlabbe) My BSD sucks less than yours, Act I (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=7040) by Antoine Jacoutot (https://twitter.com/ajacoutot) and Baptiste Daroussin (https://twitter.com/_bapt_) My BSD sucks less than yours, Act II (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=14254) by Antoine Jacoutot (https://twitter.com/ajacoutot) and Baptiste Daroussin (https://twitter.com/_bapt_) Reproducible builds on NetBSD (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=23351) by Christos Zoulas Your scheduler is not the problem (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=26845) by Martin Pieuchot Keynote 2: A French story on cybercrime (https://youtu.be/4iR8g9-39LM?t=30540) by Éric Freyssinet (https://twitter.com/ericfreyss) Case studies of sandboxing base system with Capsicum (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=731) by Mariusz Zaborski (https://twitter.com/oshogbovx) OpenBSD's small steps towards DTrace (a tale about DDB and CTF) (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=6030) by Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse The Realities of DTrace on FreeBSD (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=13096) by George Neville-Neil (https://twitter.com/gvnn3) OpenSMTPD, current state of affairs (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=16818) by Gilles Chehade (https://twitter.com/PoolpOrg) Hoisting: lessons learned integrating pledge into 500 programs (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=21764) by Theo de Raadt Keynote 3: System Performance Analysis Methodologies (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=25463) by Brendan Gregg (https://twitter.com/brendangregg) Closing Session (https://youtu.be/jqdHYEH_BQY?t=29355) Karnak “Is it done yet ?” The never ending story of pkg tools (https://youtu.be/1hjzleqGRYk?t=71) by Marc Espie (https://twitter.com/espie_openbsd) A Tale of six motherboards, three BSDs and coreboot (https://youtu.be/1hjzleqGRYk?t=7498) by Piotr Kubaj and Katarzyna Kubaj State of the DragonFly's graphics stack (https://youtu.be/1hjzleqGRYk?t=11475) by François Tigeot From NanoBSD to ZFS and Jails – FreeBSD as a Hosting Platform, Revisited (https://youtu.be/1hjzleqGRYk?t=16227) by Patrick M. Hausen Bacula – nobody ever regretted making a backup (https://youtu.be/1hjzleqGRYk?t=20069) by Dan Langille (https://twitter.com/DLangille) Never Lose a Syslog Message (https://youtu.be/qX0BS4P65cQ?t=325) by Alexander Bluhm Running CloudABI applications on a FreeBSD-based Kubernetes cluster (https://youtu.be/qX0BS4P65cQ?t=5647) by Ed Schouten (https://twitter.com/EdSchouten) The OpenBSD web stack (https://youtu.be/qX0BS4P65cQ?t=13255) by Michael W. Lucas (https://twitter.com/mwlauthor) The LLDB Debugger on NetBSD (https://youtu.be/qX0BS4P65cQ?t=16835) by Kamil Rytarowski What's in store for NetBSD 8.0? (https://youtu.be/qX0BS4P65cQ?t=21583) by Alistair Crooks Louxor A Modern Replacement for BSD spell(1) (https://youtu.be/6Nen6a1Xl7I?t=156) by Abhinav Upadhyay (https://twitter.com/abhi9u) Portable Hotplugging: NetBSD's uvm_hotplug(9) API development (https://youtu.be/6Nen6a1Xl7I?t=5874) by Cherry G. Mathew Hardening pkgsrc (https://youtu.be/6Nen6a1Xl7I?t=9343) by Pierre Pronchery (https://twitter.com/khorben) Discovering OpenBSD on AWS (https://youtu.be/6Nen6a1Xl7I?t=14874) by Laurent Bernaille (https://twitter.com/lbernail) OpenBSD Testing Infrastructure Behind bluhm.genua.de (https://youtu.be/6Nen6a1Xl7I?t=18639) by Jan Klemkow The school of hard knocks – PT1 (https://youtu.be/8wuW8lfsVGc?t=276) by Sevan Janiyan (https://twitter.com/sevanjaniyan) 7 years of maintaining firefox, and still looking ahead (https://youtu.be/8wuW8lfsVGc?t=5321) by Landry Breuil Branch VPN solution based on OpenBSD, OSPF, RDomains and Ansible (https://youtu.be/8wuW8lfsVGc?t=12385) by Remi Locherer Running BSD on AWS (https://youtu.be/8wuW8lfsVGc?t=15983) by Julien Simon and Nicolas David Getting started with OpenBSD device driver development (https://youtu.be/8wuW8lfsVGc?t=21491) by Stefan Sperling A huge thanks to the organizers, program committee, and sponsors of EuroBSDCon. Next year, EuroBSDcon will be in Bucharest, Romania. *** The story of PR 219251 (https://www.sigsegv.be//blog/freebsd/PR219251) The actual story I wanted Kristof to tell, the pf bug he fixed at the Essen Hackathon earlier this summer. As I threatened to do in my previous post, I'm going to talk about PR 219251 for a bit. The bug report dates from only a few months ago, but the first report (that I can remeber) actually came from Shawn Webb on Twitter, of all places Despite there being a stacktrace it took quite a while (nearly 6 months in fact) before I figured this one out. It took Reshad Patuck managing to distill the problem down to a small-ish test script to make real progress on this. His testcase meant that I could get core dumps and experiment. It also provided valuable clues because it could be tweaked to see what elements were required to trigger the panic. This test script starts a (vnet) jail, adds an epair interface to it, sets up pf in the jail, and then reloads the pf rules on the host. Interestingly the panic does not seem to occur if that last step is not included. Obviously not the desired behaviour, but it seems strange. The instances of pf in the jails are supposed to be separate. We try to fetch a counter value here, but instead we dereference a bad pointer. There's two here, so already we need more information. Inspection of the core dump reveals that the state pointer is valid, and contains sane information. The rule pointer (rule.ptr) points to a sensible location, but the data is mostly 0xdeadc0de. This is the memory allocator being helpful (in debug mode) and writing garbage over freed memory, to make use-after-free bugs like this one easier to find. In other words: the rule has been free()d while there was still a state pointing to it. Somehow we have a state (describing a connection pf knows about) which points to a rule which no longer exists. The core dump also shows that the problem always occurs with states and rules in the default vnet (i.e. the host pf instance), not one of the pf instances in one of the vnet jails. That matches with the observation that the test script does not trigger the panic unless we also reload the rules on the host. Great, we know what's wrong, but now we need to work out how we can get into this state. At this point we're going to have to learn something about how rules and states get cleaned up in pf. Don't worry if you had no idea, because before this bug I didn't either. The states keep a pointer to the rule they match, so when rules are changed (or removed) we can't just delete them. States get cleaned up when connections are closed or they time out. This means we have to keep old rules around until the states that use them expire. When rules are removed pfunlinkrule() adds then to the Vpfunlinkedrules list (more on that funny V prefix later). From time to time the pf purge thread will run over all states and mark the rules that are used by a state. Once that's done for all states we know that all rules that are not marked as in-use can be removed (because none of the states use it). That can be a lot of work if we've got a lot of states, so pfpurgethread() breaks that up into smaller chuncks, iterating only part of the state table on every run. We iterate over all of our virtual pf instances (VNETFOREACH()), check if it's active (for FreeBSD-EN-17.08, where we've seen this code before) and then check the expired states with pfpurgeexpiredstates(). We start at state 'idx' and only process a certain number (determined by the PFTMINTERVAL setting) states. The pfpurgeexpiredstates() function returns a new idx value to tell us how far we got. So, remember when I mentioned the odd V_ prefix? Those are per-vnet variables. They work a bit like thread-local variables. Each vnet (virtual network stack) keeps its state separate from the others, and the V_ variables use a pointer that's changed whenever we change the currently active vnet (say with CURVNETSET() or CURVNETRESTORE()). That's tracked in the 'curvnet' variable. In other words: there are as many Vpfvnetactive variables as there are vnets: number of vnet jails plus one (for the host system). Why is that relevant here? Note that idx is not a per-vnet variable, but we handle multiple pf instances here. We run through all of them in fact. That means that we end up checking the first X states in the first vnet, then check the second X states in the second vnet, the third X states in the third and so on and so on. That of course means that we think we've run through all of the states in a vnet while we really only checked some of them. So when pfpurgeunlinkedrules() runs it can end up free()ing rules that actually are still in use because pfpurgethread() skipped over the state(s) that actually used the rule. The problem only happened if we reloaded rules in the host, because the active ruleset is never free()d, even if there are no states pointing to the rule. That explains the panic, and the fix is actually quite straightforward: idx needs to be a per-vnet variable, Vpfpurge_idx, and then the problem is gone. As is often the case, the solution to a fairly hard problem turns out to be really simple. As you might expect, finding the problem takes a lot more work that fixing it Thanks to Kristof for writing up this detailed post explaining how the problem was found, and what caused it. *** vBSDcon 2017: BSD at Work (https://www.ixsystems.com/blog/vbsdcon-2017-dexter/) The third biennial vBSDcon hosted by Verisign took place September 7th through 9th with the FreeBSD Developer Summit taking place the first day. vBSDcon and iXsystems' MeetBSD event have been alternating between the East and West coasts of the U.S.A. and these two events play vital roles in reaching Washington, DC-area and Bay Area/Silicon Valley audiences. Where MeetBSD serves many BSD Vendors, vBSDcon attracts a unique government and security industry demographic that isn't found anywhere else. Conference time and travel budgets are always limited and bringing these events to their attendees is a much-appreciated service provided by their hosts. The vBSDcon FreeBSD DevSummit had a strong focus on OpenZFS, the build system and networking with the FreeBSD 12 wish list of features in mind. How to best incorporate the steady flow of new OpenZFS features into FreeBSD such as dataset-level encryption was of particular interest. This feature from a GNU/Linux-based storage vendor is tribute to the growth of the OpenZFS community which is vital in light of the recent “Death of Solaris and ZFS” at Oracle. There has never been more demand for OpenZFS on FreeBSD and the Oracle news further confirms our collective responsibility to meet that demand. The official conference opened with my talk on “Isolated BSD Build Environments” in which I explained how the bhyve hypervisor can be used to effortlessly tour FreeBSD 5.0-onward and build specific source releases on demand to trace regressions to their offending commit. I was followed by a FreeNAS user who made the good point that FreeNAS is an exemplary “entry vector” into Unix and Enterprise Storage fundamentals, given that many of the vectors our generation had are gone. Where many of us discovered Unix and the Internet via console terminals at school or work, smart phones are only delivering the Internet without the Unix. With some irony, both iOS and Android are Unix-based yet offer few opportunities for their users to learn and leverage their Unix environments. The next two talks were The History and Future of Core Dumps in FreeBSD by Sam Gwydir and Using pkgsrc for multi-platform deployments in heterogeneous environments by G. Clifford Williams. I strongly recommend that anyone wanting to speak at AsiaBSDCon read Sam's accompanying paper on core dumps because I consider it the perfect AsiaBSDCon topic and his execution is excellent. Core dumps are one of those things you rarely think about until they are a DROP EVERYTHING! priority. G. Clifford's talk was about what I consider a near-perfect BSD project: pkgsrc, the portable BSD package manager. I put it up there with OpenSSH and mandoc as projects that have provided significant value to other Open Source operating systems. G. Clifford's real-world experiences are perfectly inline with vBSDcon's goal to be more production-oriented than other BSDCons. Of the other talks, any and all Dtrace talks are always appreciated and George Neville-Neil's did not disappoint. He based it on his experiences with the Teach BSD project which is bringing FreeBSD-based computer science education to schools around the world. The security-related talks by John-Mark Gurney, Dean Freeman and Michael Shirk also represented vBSDcon's consideration of the local community and made a convincing point that the BSDs should make concerted efforts to qualify for Common Criteria, FIPS, and other Government security requirements. While some security experts will scoff at these, they are critical to the adoption of BSD-based products by government agencies. BSD Now hosts Allan Jude and Benedict Reuschling hosted an OpenZFS BoF and Ansible talk respectively and I hosted a bhyve hypervisor BoF. The Hallway Track and food at vBSDcon were excellent and both culminated with an after-dinner dramatic reading of Michael W. Lucas' latest book that raised money for the FreeBSD Foundation. A great time was had by all and it was wonderful to see everyone! News Roundup FreeBSD 10.4-RC2 Available (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2017-September/087848.html) FreeBSD 10.4 will be released soon, this is the last chance to find bugs before the official release is cut. Noteworthy Changes Since 10.4-RC1: Given that the amd64 disc1 image was overflowing, more of the base components installed into the disc1 (live) file systems had to be disabled. Most notably, this removed the compiler toolchain from the disc1 images. All disabled tools are still available with the dvd1 images, though. The aesni(4) driver now no longer shares a single FPU context across multiple sessions in multiple threads, addressing problems seen when employing aesni(4) for ipsec(4). Support for netmap(4) by the ixgbe(4) driver has been brought into line with the netmap(4) API present in stable/10. Also, ixgbe(4) now correctly handles VFs in its netmap(4) support again instead of treating these as PFs. During the creation of amd64 and i386 VM images, etcupdate(8) and mergemaster(8) databases now are bootstrapped, akin to what happens along the extraction of base.txz as part of a new installation via bsdinstall(8). This change allows for both of these tools to work out-of-box on the VM images and avoids errors seen when upgrading these images via freebsd-update(8). If you are still on the stable/10 branch, you should test upgrading to 10.4, and make sure there are no problems with your workload Additional testing specifically of the features that have changed since 10.4-BETA1 would also be most helpful This will be the last release from the stable/10 branch *** OpenBSD changes of note 628 (https://www.tedunangst.com/flak/post/openbsd-changes-of-note-628) EuroBSDCon in two weeks. Be sure to attend early and often. Many and various documentation improvements for libcrypto. New man pages, rewrites, expanded bugs sections, and more. Only allow upward migration in vmd. There's a README for the syspatch build system if you want to run your own. Move the kernel relinking code from /etc/rc into a seperate script usable by syspatch. Kernel patches can now be reduced to just the necessary files. Make the callers of sogetopt() responsible for allocating memory. Now allocation and free occur in the same place. Use waitpid() instead of wait() in most programs to avoid accidentally collecting the wrong child. Have cu call isatty() before making assumptions. Switch mandoc rendering of mathematical symbols and greek letters from trying to imitate the characters' graphical shapes, which resulted in unintelligible renderings in many cases, to transliterations conveying the characters' meanings. Update libexpat to 2.2.4. Fix copying partial UTF-8 characters. Sigh, here we go again. Work around bug in F5's handling of the supported elliptic curves extension. RFC 4492 only defines elliptic_curves for ClientHello. However, F5 is sending it in ServerHello. We need to skip over it since our TLS extension parsing code is now more strict. After a first install, run syspatch -c to check for patches. If SMAP is present, clear PSL_AC on kernel entry and interrupt so that only the code in copy{in,out}* that need it run with it set. Panic if it's set on entry to trap() or syscall(). Prompted by Maxime Villard's NetBSD work. Errata. New drivers for arm: rktemp, mvpinctrl, mvmpic, mvneta, mvmdio, mvpxa, rkiic, rkpmic. No need to exec rm from within mandoc. We know there's exactly one file and directory to remove. Similarly with running cmp. Revert to Mesa 13.0.6 to hopefully address rendering issues a handful of people have reported with xpdf/fvwm on ivy bridge with modesetting driver. Rewrite ALPN extension using CBB/CBS and the new extension framework. Rewrite SRTP extension using CBB/CBS and the new extension framework. Revisit 2q queue sizes. Limit the hot queue to 1/20th the cache size up to a max of 4096 pages. Limit the warm and cold queues to half the cache. This allows us to more effectively notice re-interest in buffers instead of losing it in a large hot queue. Add glass console support for arm64. Probably not yet for your machine, though. Replace heaps of hand-written syscall stubs in ld.so with a simpler framework. 65535 is a valid port to listen on. When xinit starts an X server that listens only on UNIX socket, prefer DISPLAY=unix:0 rather than DISPLAY=:0. This will prevent applications from ever falling back to TCP if the UNIX socket connection fails (such as when the X server crashes). Reverted. Add -z and -Z options to apmd to auto suspend or hibernate when low on battery. Remove the original (pre-IETF) chacha20-poly1305 cipher suites. Add urng(4) which supports various USB RNG devices. Instead of adding one driver per device, start bundling them into a single driver. Remove old deactivated pledge path code. A replacement mechanism is being brewed. Fix a bug from the extension parsing rewrite. Always parse ALPN even if no callback has been installed to prevent leaving unprocessed data which leads to a decode error. Clarify what is meant by syslog priorities being ordered, since the numbers and priorities are backwards. Remove a stray setlocale() from ksh, eliminating a lot of extra statically linked code. Unremove some NPN symbols from libssl because ports software thinks they should be there for reasons. Fix saved stack location after resume. Somehow clang changed it. Resume works again on i386. Improve error messages in vmd and vmctl to be more informative. Stop building the miniroot installer for OMAP3 Beagleboards. It hasn't worked in over a year and nobody noticed. Have the callers of sosetopt() free the mbuf for symmetry. On octeon, let the kernel use the hardware FPU even if emulation is compiled in. It's faster. Fix support for 486DX CPUs by not calling cpuid. I used to own a 486. Now I don't. Merge some drm fixes from linux. Defer probing of floppy drives, eliminating delays during boot. Better handling of probes and beacons and timeouts and scans in wifi stack to avoid disconnects. Move mutex, condvar, and thread-specific data routes, pthreadonce, and pthreadexit from libpthread to libc, along with low-level bits to support them. Let's thread aware (but not actually threaded) code work with just libc. New POSIX xlocale implementation. Complete as long as you only use ASCII and UTF-8, as you should. Round and round it goes; when 6.2 stops, nobody knows. A peak at the future? *** Screencasting with OpenBSD (http://eradman.com/posts/screencasting.html) USB Audio Any USB microphone should appear as a new audio device. Here is the dmesg for my mic by ART: uaudio0 at uhub0 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "M-One USB" rev 1.10/0.01 addr 2 uaudio0: audio rev 1.00, 8 mixer controls audio1 at uaudio0 audioctl can read off all of the specific characterisitcs of this device $ audioctl -f /dev/audio1 | grep record mode=play,record record.rate=48000 record.channels=1 record.precision=16 record.bps=2 record.msb=1 record.encoding=slinear_le record.pause=0 record.active=0 record.block_size=1960 record.bytes=0 record.errors=0 Now test the recording from the second audio device using aucat(1) aucat -f rsnd/1 -o file.wav If the device also has a headset audio can be played through the same device. aucat -f rsnd/1 -i file.wav Screen Capture using Xvfb The rate at which a framebuffer for your video card is a feature of the hardware and software your using, and it's often very slow. x11vnc will print an estimate of the banwidth for the system your running. x11vnc ... 09/05/2012 22:23:45 fb read rate: 7 MB/sec This is about 4fps. We can do much better by using a virtual framebuffer. Here I'm setting up a new screen, setting the background color, starting cwm and an instance of xterm Xvfb :1 -screen 0 720x540x16 & DISPLAY=:1 xsetroot -solid steelblue & DISPLAY=:1 cwm & DISPLAY=:1 xterm +sb -fa Hermit -fs 14 & Much better! Now we're up around 20fps. x11vnc -display :1 & ... 11/05/2012 18:04:07 fb read rate: 168 MB/sec Make a connection to this virtual screen using raw encoding to eliminate time wasted on compression. vncviewer localhost -encodings raw A test recording with sound then looks like this ffmpeg -f sndio -i snd/1 -y -f x11grab -r 12 -s 800x600 -i :1.0 -vcodec ffv1 ~/out.avi Note: always stop the recording and playback using q, not Ctrl-C so that audio inputs are shut down properly. Screen Capture using Xephyr Xephyr is perhaps the easiest way to run X with a shadow framebuffer. This solution also avoids reading from the video card's RAM, so it's reasonably fast. Xephyr -ac -br -noreset -screen 800x600 :1 & DISPLAY=:1 xsetroot -solid steelblue & DISPLAY=:1 cwm & DISPLAY=:1 xrdb -load ~/.Xdefaults & DISPLAY=:1 xterm +sb -fa "Hermit" -fs 14 & Capture works in exactally the same way. This command tries to maintain 12fps. ffmpeg -f sndio -i snd/1 -y -f x11grab -r 12 -s 800x600 -i :1.0 -vcodec ffv1 -acodec copy ~/out.avi To capture keyboard and mouse input press Ctrl then Shift. This is very handy for using navigating a window manager in the nested X session. Arranging Windows I have sometimes found it helpful to launch applications and arrange them in a specific way. This will open up a web browser listing the current directory and position windows using xdotool DISPLAY=:1 midori "file:///pwd" & sleep 2 DISPLAY=:1 xdotool search --name "xterm" windowmove 0 0 DISPLAY=:1 xdotool search --class "midori" windowmove 400 0 DISPLAY=:1 xdotool search --class "midori" windowsize 400 576 This will position the window precisely so that it appears to be in a tmux window on the right. Audio/Video Sync If you find that the audio is way out of sync with the video, you can ajust the start using the -ss before the audio input to specify the number of seconds to delay. My final recording command line, that delays the audio by 0.5 seconds, writing 12fps ffmpeg -ss 0.5 -f sndio -i snd/1 -y -f x11grab -r 12 -s 800x600 -i :1.0 -vcodec ffv1 -acodec copy ~/out.avi Sharing a Terminal with tmux If you're trying to record a terminal session, tmux is able to share a session. In this way a recording of an X framebuffer can be taken without even using the screen. Start by creating the session. tmux -2 -S /tmp/tmux0 Then on the remote side connect on the same socket tmux -2 -S /tmp/tmux0 attach Taking Screenshots Grabbing a screenshots on Xvfb server is easily accomplished with ImageMagick's import command DISPLAY=:1 import -window root screenshot.png Audio Processing and Video Transcoding The first step is to ensure that the clip begins and ends where you'd like it to. The following will make a copy of the recording starting at time 00:00 and ending at 09:45 ffmpeg -i interactive-sql.avi -vcodec copy -acodec copy -ss 00:00:00 -t 00:09:45 interactive-sql-trimmed.avi mv interactive-sql-trimmed.avi interactive-sql.avi Setting the gain correctly is very important with an analog mixer, but if you're using a USB mic there may not be a gain option; simply record using it's built-in settings and then adjust the levels afterwards using a utility such as normalize. First extact the audio as a raw PCM file and then run normalize ffmpeg -i interactive-sql.avi -c:a copy -vn audio.wav normalize audio.wav Next merge the audio back in again ffmpeg -i interactive-sql.avi -i audio.wav -map 0:0 -map 1:0 -c copy interactive-sql-normalized.avi The final step is to compress the screencast for distribution. Encoding to VP8/Vorbis is easy: ffmpeg -i interactive-sql-normalized.avi -c:v libvpx -b:v 1M -c:a libvorbis -q:a 6 interactive-sql.webm H.264/AAC is tricky. For most video players the color space needs to be set to yuv420p. The -movflags puts the index data at the beginning of the file to enable streaming/partial content requests over HTTP: ffmpeg -y -i interactive-sql-normalized.avi -c:v libx264 -preset slow -crf 14 -pix_fmt yuv420p -movflags +faststart -c:a aac -q:a 6 interactive-sql.mp4 TrueOS @ Ohio Linuxfest '17! (https://www.trueos.org/blog/trueos-ohio-linuxfest-17/) Dru Lavigne and Ken Moore are both giving presentations on Saturday the 30th. Sit in and hear about new developments for the Lumina and FreeNAS projects. Ken is offering Lumina Rising: Challenging Desktop Orthodoxy at 10:15 am in Franklin A. Hear his thoughts about the ideas propelling desktop environment development and how Lumina, especially Lumina 2, is seeking to offer a new model of desktop architecture. Elements discussed include session security, application dependencies, message handling, and operating system integration. Dru is talking about What's New in FreeNAS 11 at 2:00 pm in Franklin D. She'll be providing an overview of some of the new features added in FreeNAS 11.0, including: Alert Services Starting specific services at boot time AD Monitoring to ensure the AD service restarts if disconnected A preview of the new user interface support for S3-compatible storage and the bhyve hypervisor She's also giving a sneak peek of FreeNAS 11.1, which has some neat features: A complete rewrite of the Jails/Plugins system as FreeNAS moves from warden to iocage Writing new plugins with just a few lines of code A brand new asynchronous middleware API Who's going? Attending this year are: Dru Lavigne (dlavigne): Dru leads the technical documentation team at iX, and contributes heavily to open source documentation projects like FreeBSD, FreeNAS, and TrueOS. Ken Moore (beanpole134): Ken is the lead developer of Lumina and a core contributor to TrueOS. He also works on a number of other Qt5 projects for iXsystems. J.T. Pennington (q5sys): Some of you may be familiar with his work on BSDNow, but J.T. also contributes to the TrueOS, Lumina, and SysAdm projects, helping out with development and general bug squashing. *** Beastie Bits Lumina Development Preview: Theme Engine (https://www.trueos.org/blog/lumina-development-preview-theme-engine/) It's happening! Official retro Thinkpad lappy spotted in the wild (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/09/04/retro_thinkpad_spotted_in_the_wild/) LLVM libFuzzer and SafeStack ported to NetBSD (https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/llvm_libfuzzer_and_safestack_ported) Remaining 2017 FreeBSD Events (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/event-calendar/2017-openzfs-developer-summit/) *** Feedback/Questions Andrew - BSD Teaching Material (http://dpaste.com/0YTT0VP) Seth - Switching to Tarsnap after Crashplan becomes no more (http://dpaste.com/1SK92ZX#wrap) Thomas - Native encryption in ZFS (http://dpaste.com/02KD5FX#wrap) Coding Cowboy - Coding Cowboy - Passwords and clipboards (http://dpaste.com/31K0E40#wrap) ***

digitalSoup
Episode 037 Frankensteined

digitalSoup

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2017 72:14


It's an episode filled with tangents and wide ranging topics, from CrashPlan and Backblaze backup news to more games taking advantage of mobile AR tech, including The Walking Dead and Star Wars. Plus Usually Dave spills the beans on the No Peek 365 Photography Challenge he is taking part in and what the heck is all this buttfumes.com talk? Weekly Riddle: This old one runs forever, but never moves at all. He has not lungs or throat, but still a mighty roaring call. What is it? Answer at the end of the episode! Crashplan exits consumer backup game With the news that CrashPlan was pulling out of the consumer backup service game a lot of people were panicking. Meanwhile Backblaze absolutely killed it with a terrific social media blitz and may have cleaned house. Walking Dead meet Pokemon Go: Called The Walking Dead: Our World, this new mobile game for iOS and Android looks to take the zombie killing fun that fans of the show love and mash it up with the augmented reality mobile gaming concept from Pokemon Go. There's no release date just yet, but will you be lining up to slay zombies and try to survive when it hits the app stores? Star Wars: Jedi Challenges Speaking of AR games, you wanna be a Jedi master and have light saber duels with some of the biggest Jedi and Sith villains in the Star Wars universe? A real life Dr. Frankenstein. An Italian Neurosurgeon named Sergio Canvero is claiming that next fall in China he is going to complete a Full Body Transplant, swapping heads on real human bodies, in a procedure dubbed as HEAVEN. HEAVEN is short for Head Anastomosis Venture. This is some scary sh*t!

Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)
Cool Stuff Found, DOCSIS 3.1, and The Backup Tango – Mac Geek Gab 674

Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2017


Your questions answered, as always, including several unresponsive Macs and how to fix them, Life after CrashPlan, Problematic iCloud syncing, and moving your media libraries. Cool Stuff Found kicks things off, though, with lots of great stuff that you'll love. Plus, a healthy competition about internet speeds between your two […]

BSD Now
210: Your questions, part I

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2017 117:02


In this episode, we take a look at the reimplementation of NetBSD using a Microkernel, check out what makes DHCP faster, and see what high-process count support for DragonflyBSD has to offer, and we answer the questions you've always wanted to ask us. This episode was brought to you by Headlines A Reimplementation Of Netbsd Using a Microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Minix author Andy Tanenbaum writes in Part 1 of a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Based on the MINIX 3 microkernel, we have constructed a system that to the user looks a great deal like NetBSD. It uses pkgsrc, NetBSD headers and libraries, and passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running, and without user processes noticing it. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Research at the Vrije Universiteit has resulted in a reimplementation of NetBSD using a microkernel instead of the traditional monolithic kernel. To the user, the system looks a great deal like NetBSD (it passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running. The latest work has been adding live update, making it possible to upgrade to a new version of the operating system WITHOUT a reboot and without running processes even noticing. No other operating system can do this. The system is built on MINIX 3, a derivative of the original MINIX system, which was intended for education. However, after the original author, Andrew Tanenbaum, received a 2 million euro grant from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and a 2.5 million euro grant from the European Research Council, the focus changed to building a highly reliable, secure, fault tolerant operating system, with an emphasis on embedded systems. The code is open source and can be downloaded from www.minix3.org. It runs on the x86 and ARM Cortex V8 (e.g., BeagleBones). Since 2007, the Website has been visited over 3 million times and the bootable image file has been downloaded over 600,000 times. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Part 2 (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-2-of-2/) is also available. *** Rapid DHCP: Or, how do Macs get on the network so fast? (https://cafbit.com/post/rapid_dhcp_or_how_do/) One of life's minor annoyances is having to wait on my devices to connect to the network after I wake them from sleep. All too often, I'll open the lid on my EeePC netbook, enter a web address, and get the dreaded "This webpage is not available" message because the machine is still working on connecting to my Wi-Fi network. On some occasions, I have to twiddle my thumbs for as long as 10-15 seconds before the network is ready to be used. The frustrating thing is that I know it doesn't have to be this way. I know this because I have a Mac. When I open the lid of my MacBook Pro, it connects to the network nearly instantaneously. In fact, no matter how fast I am, the network comes up before I can even try to load a web page. My curiosity got the better of me, and I set out to investigate how Macs are able to connect to the network so quickly, and how the network connect time in other operating systems could be improved. I figure there are three main categories of time-consuming activities that occur during network initialization: Link establishment. This is the activity of establishing communication with the network's link layer. In the case of Wi-Fi, the radio must be powered on, the access point detected, and the optional encryption layer (e.g. WPA) established. After link establishment, the device is able to send and receive Ethernet frames on the network. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). Through DHCP handshaking, the device negotiates an IP address for its use on the local IP network. A DHCP server is responsible for managing the IP addresses available for use on the network. Miscellaneous overhead. The operating system may perform any number of mundane tasks during the process of network initialization, including running scripts, looking up preconfigured network settings in a local database, launching programs, etc. My investigation thus far is primarily concerned with the DHCP phase, although the other two categories would be interesting to study in the future. I set up a packet capture environment with a spare wireless access point, and observed the network activity of a number of devices as they initialized their network connection. For a worst-case scenario, let's look at the network activity captured while an Android tablet is connecting: This tablet, presumably in the interest of "optimization", is initially skipping the DHCP discovery phase and immediately requesting its previous IP address. The only problem is this is a different network, so the DHCP server ignores these requests. After about 4.5 seconds, the tablet stubbornly tries again to request its old IP address. After another 4.5 seconds, it resigns itself to starting from scratch, and performs the DHCP discovery needed to obtain an IP address on the new network. In all fairness, this delay wouldn't be so bad if the device was connecting to the same network as it was previously using. However, notice that the tablet waits a full 1.13 seconds after link establishment to even think about starting the DHCP process. Engineering snappiness usually means finding lots of small opportunities to save a few milliseconds here and there, and someone definitely dropped the ball here. In contrast, let's look at the packet dump from the machine with the lightning-fast network initialization, and see if we can uncover the magic that is happening under the hood: The key to understanding the magic is the first three unicast ARP requests. It looks like Mac OS remembers certain information about not only the last connected network, but the last several networks. In particular, it must at least persist the following tuple for each of these networks: > 1. The Ethernet address of the DHCP server > 2. The IP address of the DHCP server > 3. Its own IP address, as assigned by the DHCP server During network initialization, the Mac transmits carefully crafted unicast ARP requests with this stored information. For each network in its memory, it attempts to send a request to the specific Ethernet address of the DHCP server for that network, in which it asks about the server's IP address, and requests that the server reply to the IP address which the Mac was formerly using on that network. Unless network hosts have been radically shuffled around, at most only one of these ARP requests will result in a response—the request corresponding to the current network, if the current network happens to be one of the remembered networks. This network recognition technique allows the Mac to very rapidly discover if it is connected to a known network. If the network is recognized (and presumably if the Mac knows that the DHCP lease is still active), it immediately and presumptuously configures its IP interface with the address it knows is good for this network. (Well, it does perform a self-ARP for good measure, but doesn't seem to wait more than 13ms for a response.) The DHCP handshaking process begins in the background by sending a DHCP request for its assumed IP address, but the network interface is available for use during the handshaking process. If the network was not recognized, I assume the Mac would know to begin the DHCP discovery phase, instead of sending blind requests for a former IP address as the Galaxy Tab does. The Mac's rapid network initialization can be credited to more than just the network recognition scheme. Judging by the use of ARP (which can be problematic to deal with in user-space) and the unusually regular transmission intervals (a reliable 1.0ms delay between each packet sent), I'm guessing that the Mac's DHCP client system is entirely implemented as tight kernel-mode code. The Mac began the IP interface initialization process a mere 10ms after link establishment, which is far faster than any other device I tested. Android devices such as the Galaxy Tab rely on the user-mode dhclient system (part of the dhcpcd package) dhcpcd program, which no doubt brings a lot of additional overhead such as loading the program, context switching, and perhaps even running scripts. The next step for some daring kernel hacker is to implement a similarly aggressive DHCP client system in the Linux kernel, so that I can enjoy fast sign-on speeds on my Android tablet, Android phone, and Ubuntu netbook. There already exists a minimal DHCP client implementation in the Linux kernel, but it lacks certain features such as configuring the DNS nameservers. Perhaps it wouldn't be too much work to extend this code to support network recognition and interface with a user-mode daemon to handle such auxillary configuration information received via DHCP. If I ever get a few spare cycles, maybe I'll even take a stab at it. You can also find other ways of optimizing the dhclient program and how it works in the dhclient tutorial on Calomel.org (https://calomel.org/dhclient.html). *** BSDCam Trip Report (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/bsdcam-2017-trip-report-michael-lucas/) Over the decades, FreeBSD development and coordination has shifted from being purely on-line to involving more and more in-person coordination and cooperation. The FreeBSD Foundation sponsors a devsummit right before BSDCan, EuroBSDCon, and AsiaBSDCon, so that developers traveling to the con can leverage their airfare and hammer out some problems. Yes, the Internet is great for coordination, but nothing beats a group of developers spending ten minutes together to sketch on a whiteboard and figuring out exactly how to make something bulletproof. In addition to the coordination efforts, though, conference devsummits are hierarchical. There's a rigid schedule, with topics decided in advance. Someone leads the session. Sessions can be highly informative, passionate arguments, or anything in between. BSDCam is… a little different. It's an invaluable part of the FreeBSD ecosystem. However, it's something that I wouldn't normally attend. But right now, is not normal. I'm writing a new edition of Absolute FreeBSD. To my astonishment, people have come to rely on this book when planning their deployments and operations. While I find this satisfying, it also increases the pressure on me to get things correct. When I wrote my first FreeBSD book back in 2000, a dozen mailing lists provided authoritative information on FreeBSD development. One person could read every one of those lists. Today, that's not possible—and the mailing lists are only one narrow aspect of the FreeBSD social system. Don't get me wrong—it's pretty easy to find out what people are doing and how the system works. But it's not that easy to find out what people will be doing and how the system will work. If this book is going to be future-proof, I needed to leave my cozy nest and venture into the wilds of Cambridge, England. Sadly, the BSDCam chair agreed with my logic, so I boarded an aluminum deathtrap—sorry, a “commercial airliner”—and found myself hurtled from Detroit to Heathrow. And one Wednesday morning, I made it to the William Gates building of Cambridge University, consciousness nailed to my body by a thankfully infinite stream of proper British tea. BSDCam attendance is invitation only, and the facilities can only handle fifty folks or so. You need to be actively working on FreeBSD to wrangle an invite. Developers attend from all over the world. Yet, there's no agenda. Robert Watson is the chair, but he doesn't decide on the conference topics. He goes around the room and asks everyone to introduce themselves, say what they're working on, and declare what they want to discuss during the conference. The topics of interest are tallied. The most popular topics get assigned time slots and one of the two big rooms. Folks interested in less popular topics are invited to claim one of the small breakout rooms. Then the real fun begins. I started by eavesdropping in the virtualization workshop. For two hours, people discussed FreeBSD's virtualization needs, strengths, and weaknesses. What needs help? What should this interface look like? What compatibility is important, and what isn't? By the end of the session, the couple dozen people had developed a reasonable consensus and, most importantly, some folks had added items to their to-do lists. Repeat for a dozen more topics. I got a good grip on what's really happening with security mitigation techniques, FreeBSD's cloud support, TCP/IP improvements, advances in teaching FreeBSD, and more. A BSDCan devsummit presentation on packaging the base system is informative, but eavesdropping on two dozen highly educated engineers arguing about how to nail down the final tidbits needed to make that a real thing is far more educational. To my surprise, I was able to provide useful feedback for some sessions. I speak at a lot of events outside of the FreeBSD world, and was able to share much of what I hear at Linux conferences. A tool that works well for an experienced developer doesn't necessarily work well for everyone. Every year, I leave BSDCan tired. I left BSDCam entirely exhausted. These intense, focused discussions stretched my brain. But, I have a really good idea where key parts of FreeBSD development are actually headed. This should help future-proof the new Absolute FreeBSD, as much as any computer book can be future-proof. Plus, BSDCam throws the most glorious conference dinner I've ever seen. I want to thank Robert Watson for his kind invitation, and the FreeBSD Foundation for helping defray the cost of this trip Interview - The BSDNow Crew As a kid, what did you dream of to become as an adult? JT: An Astronaut BR: I wanted to be a private detective, because of all the crime novels that I read back then. I didn't get far with it. However, I think the structured analysis skills (who did what, when, and such) help me in debugging and sysadmin work. AJ: Didn't think about it much How do you manage to stay organized day to day with so much things you're actively doing each day? (Day job, wife/girlfriend, conferences, hobbies, friends, etc.) JT: Who said I was organized? BR: A lot of stuff in my calendar as reminders, open browser tabs as “to read later” list. A few things like task switching when getting stuck helps. Also, focus on a single goal for the day, even though there will be distractions. Slowly, but steadily chip away at the things you're working on. Rather than to procrastinate and put things back to review later, get started early with easy things for a big task and then tackle the hard part. Often, things look totally chaotic and unmanageable, until you start working on them. AJ: I barely manage. Lots of Google Calendar reminders, and the entire wall of my office is covered in whiteboard sheet todo lists. I use pinboard.in to deal with finding and organizing bookmarks. Write things down, don't trust your memory. What hobbies outside of IT do you have? JT: I love photography, but I do that Professional part time, so I'm not sure if that counts as a hobby anymore. I guess it'd have to be working in the garage on my cars. BR: I do Tai Chi to relax once a week in a group, but can also do it alone, pretty much everywhere. Way too much Youtube watching and browsing the web. I did play some games before studying at the university and I'm still proud that I could control it to the bare minimum not to impact my studies. A few “lapses” from time to time, revisiting the old classics since the newer stuff won't run on my machines anyway. Holiday time is pretty much spent for BSD conferences and events, this is where I can relax and talk with like-minded people from around the world, which is fascinating. Plus, it gets me to various places and countries I never would have dared to visit on my own. AJ: I play a few video games, and I like to ski, although I don't go very often as most of my vacation time is spent hanging out with my BSD friends at various conferences How do you relax? JT: What is this word ‘relax' and what does it mean? BR: My Tai Chi plays a big part in it I guess. I really calms you and the constant stream of thoughts for a while. It also gives you better clarity of what's important in life. Watching movies, sleeping long. AJ: Usually watching TV or Movies. Although I have taken to doing most of my TV watching on my exercise bike now, but it is still mentally relaxing If FreeBSD didn't exist, which BSD flavour would you use? Why? JT: I use TrueOS, but if FreeBSD didn't exist, that project might not either… so… My other choice would be HardenedBSD, but since it's also based on FreeBSD I'm in the same dillema. BR: I once installed NetBSD to see what It can do. If FreeBSD wouldn't exist, I would probably try my luck with it. OpenBSD is also appealing, but I've never installed it. AJ: When I started using FreeBSD in 2000, the only other BSD I had heard of at the time was OpenBSD. If FreeBSD wasn't around, I don't think the world would look like it does, so it is hard to speculate. If any of the BSD's weren't around and you had to use Linux, which camp would belong to? (Redhat, SUSE, Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo?) JT: I learned Linux in the mid 90s using Slackware, which I used consistently up until the mid 2000s, when I joined the PuppyLinux community and eventually became a developer (FYI, Puppy was/is/can be based on Slackware -- its complicated). So I'd go back to using either Slackware or PuppyLinux. BR: I tried various Linux distributions until I landed at Debian. I used is pretty extensively as my desktop OS at home, building custom kernels and packages to install them until I discovered FreeBSD. I ran both side by side for a few months for learning until one day I figured out that I had not booted Debian in a while, so I switched completely. AJ: The first Linux I played with was Slackware, and it is the most BSD like, but the bits of Linux I learned in school were Redhat and so I can somewhat wrap my head around it, although now that they are changing everything to systemd, all of that old knowledge is more harmful than useful. Are you still finding yourself in need to use Windows/Mac OS? Why? JT: I work part time as a professional Photographer, so I do use Windows for my photography work. While I can do everything I need to do in Linux, it comes down to being pragmatic about my time. What takes me several hours to accomplish in Linux I can accomplish in 20 minutes on Windows. BR: I was a long time Windows-only user before my Unix days. But back when Vista was about to come out and I needed a new laptop, my choice was basically learning to cope with Vistas awful features or learn MacOS X. I did the latter, it increased my productivity since it's really a good Unix desktop experience (at least, back then). I only have to use Windows at work from time to time as I manage our Windows Terminal server, which keeps the exposure low enough and I only connect to it to use a certain app not available for the Mac or the BSDs. AJ: I still use Windows to play games, for a lot of video conferencing, and to produce BSD Now. Some of it could be done on BSD but not as easily. I have promised myself that I will switch to 100% BSD rather than upgrade to Windows 10, so we'll see how that goes. Please describe your home networking setup. Router type, router OS, router hardware, network segmentation, wifi apparatus(es), other devices connected, and anything else that might be interesting about your home network. BR: Very simple and boring: Apple Airport Express base station and an AVM FritzBox for DNS, DHCP, and the link to my provider. A long network cable to my desktop machine. That I use less and less often. I just bought an RPI 3 for some home use in the future to replace it. Mostly my brother's and my Macbook Pro's are connected, our phones and the iPad of my mother. AJ: I have a E3-1220 v3 (dual 3.1ghz + HT) with 8 GB of ram, and 4x Intel gigabit server NICs as my router, and it runs vanilla FreeBSD (usually some snapshot of -current). I have 4 different VLANs, Home, Office, DMZ, and Guest WiFi. WiFi is served via a tiny USB powered device I bought in Tokyo years ago, it serves 3 different SSIDs, one for each VLAN except the DMZ. There are ethernet jacks in every room wired for 10 gigabit, although the only machines with 10 gigabit are my main workstation, file server, and some machines in the server rack. There are 3 switches, one for the house (in the laundry room), one for the rack, and one for 10gig stuff. There is a rack in the basement spare bedroom, it has 7 servers in it, mostly storage for live replicas of customer data for my company. How do guys manage to get your work done on FreeBSD desktops? What do you do when you need to a Linux or Windows app that isn't ported, or working? I've made several attempts to switch to FreeBSD, but each attempt failed because of tools not being available (e.g. Zoom, Dropbox, TeamViewer, Crashplan) or broken (e.g. VirtualBox). BR: I use VIrtualBox for everything that is not natively available or Windows-only. Unfortunately, that means no modern games. I mostly do work in the shell when I'm on FreeBSD and when it has to be a graphical application, then I use Fluxbox as the DE. I want to get work done, not look at fancy eye-candy that get's boring after a while. Deactivated the same stuff on my mac due to the same reason. I look for alternative software online, but my needs are relatively easy to satisfy as I'm not doing video editing/rendering and such. AJ: I generally find that I don't need these apps. I use Firefox, Thunderbird, OpenSSH, Quassel, KomodoEdit, and a few other apps, so my needs are not very demanding. It is annoying when packages are broken, but I usually work around this with boot environments, and being able to just roll back to a version that worked for a few days until the problem is solved. I do still have access to a windows machine for the odd time I need specific VPN software or access to Dell/HP etc out-of-band management tools. Which desktop environments are your favorite, and why? For example, I like i3, Xfce, and I'm drawn to Lumina's ethos, but so far always seem to end up back on Xfc because of its ease of use, flexibility, and dashing good looks. JT: As a Lumina Desktop developer, I think my preference is obvious. ;) I am also a long timeOpenBox user, so I have a soft place in my heart for that as well. BR: I use Fluxbox when I need to work with a lot of windows or an application demands X11. KDE and others are too memory heavy for me and I rarely use even 20% of the features they provide. AJ: I was a long time KDE user, but I have adopted Lumina. I find it fast, and that it gets out of my way and lets me do what I want. It had some annoyances early on, but I've nagged the developers into making it work for me. Which command-line shells do you prefer, why, and how (if at all) have you customised the environment or prompt? BR: I use zsh, but without all the fancy stuff you can find online. It might make you more productive, yes. But again, I try to keep things simple. I'm slowly learning tmux and want to work more in it in the future. I sometimes look at other BSD people's laptops and am amazed at what they do with window-management in tmux. My prompt looks like this: bcr@Voyager:~> 20:20 17-08-17 Put this in your .zshrc to get the same result: PROMPT='%n@%m:%~>' RPROMPT='%T %D' AJ: I started using tcsh early on, because it was the shell on the first box I had access to, and because one of the first things I read in “BSD Hacks” was how to enable ‘typo correction”, which made my life a lot better especially on dial up in the early days. My shell prompt looks like this: allan@CA-TOR1-02:/usr/home/allan% What is one thing (or more) missing in FreeBSD you would import from another project or community? Could be tech, process, etc. JT: AUFS from Linux BR: Nohup from Illumos where you can detach an already running process and put it in the background. I often forget that and I'm not in tmux when that happens, so I can see myself use that feature a lot. AJ: Zones (more complete Jails) from IllumOS how do you manage your time to learn about and work on FreeBSD? Does your work/employment enable what you do, or are your contributions mainly done in private time? JT: These days I'm mostly learning things I need for work, so it just falls into something I'm doing while working on work projects. BR: We have a lot of time during the semester holidays to learn on our own, it's part of the idea of being in a university to keep yourself updated, at least for me. Especially in the fast moving world of IT. I also read a lot in my free time. My interests can shift sometimes, but then I devour everything I can find on the topic. Can be a bit excessive, but has gotten me where I am now and I still need a lot to learn (and want to). Since I work with FreeBSD at work (my owndoing), I can try out many things there. AJ: My work means a spend a lot of time working with FreeBSD, but not that much time working ON it. My contributions are mostly done outside of work, but as I own the company I do get more flexibility to take time off for conferences and other FreeBSD related stuff. we know we can bribe Michael W Lucas with gelato (good gelato that is), but what can we use to bribe you guys? Like when I want to have Allan to work on fixing a bug which prevents me from running ZFS on this fancy rock64 board? BR: Desserts of various kinds. AJ: I am probably not the right person to look at your rock64 board. Most people in the project have taken to bribing me with chocolate. In general, my todo list is so long, the best way is a trade, you take this task and I'll take that task. Is your daily mobile device iOS, Android, Windows Mobile, or other? Why? JT: These days I'm using Android on my Blackberry Priv, but until recently I was still a heavy user of Sailfish OS. I would use SailfishOS everyday, if I could find a phone with a keyboard that I could run it on. BR: iOS on the iPhone 7 currently. Never used an Android phone, saw it on other people's devices and what they can do with it (much more). But the infrequent security updates (if any at all) keep me away from it. AJ: I have a Google Nexus 6 (Android 7.1). I wanted the ‘pure' Android experience, and I had been happy with my previous Nexus S. I don't run a custom OS/ROM or anything because I use the phone to verify that video streams work on an ‘average users device'. I am displeased that support for my device will end soon. I am not sure what device I will get next, but it definitely won't be an iPhone. News Roundup Beta Update - Request for (more) Testing (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170808065718&mode=flat&count=30) https://beta.undeadly.org/ has received an update. The most significant changes include: The site has been given a less antiquated "look". (As the topic icons have been eliminated, we are no longer seeking help with those graphics.) The site now uses a moderate amount of semantic HTML5. Several bugs in the HTML fragment validator (used for submissions and comments) have been fixed. To avoid generating invalid HTML, submission content which fails validation is no longer displayed in submission/comment previews. Plain text submissions are converted to HTML in a more useful fashion. (Instead of just converting each EOL to , the converter now generates proper paragraphs and interprets two or more consecutive EOLs as indicating a paragraph break.) The redevelopment remains a work-in-progress. Many thanks to those who have contributed! As before, constructive feedback would be appreciated. Of particular interest are reports of bugs in behaviour (for example, in the HTML validator or in authentication) that would preclude the adoption of the current code for the main site. High-process-count support added to master (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2017-August/313552.html) We've fixed a number of bottlenecks that can develop when the number of user processes runs into the tens of thousands or higher. One thing led to another and I said to myself, "gee, we have a 6-digit PID, might as well make it work to a million!". With the commits made today, master can support at least 900,000 processes with just a kern.maxproc setting in /boot/loader.conf, assuming the machine has the memory to handle it. And, in fact, as today's machines start to ratchet up there in both memory capacity and core count, with fast storage (NVMe) and fast networking (10GigE and higher), even in consumer boxes, this is actually something that one might want to do. With AMD's threadripper and EPYC chips now out, the IntelAMD cpu wars are back on! Boasting up to 32 cores (64 threads) per socket and two sockets on EPYC, terabytes of ram, and motherboards with dual 10GigE built-in, the reality is that these numbers are already achievable in a useful manner. In anycase, I've tested these changes on a dual-socket xeon. I can in-fact start 900,000 processes. They don't get a whole lot of cpu and running 'ps' would be painful, but it works and the system is still responsive from the shell with all of that going on. xeon126# uptime 1:42PM up 9 mins, 3 users, load averages: 890407.00, 549381.40, 254199.55 In fact, judging from the memory use, these minimal test processes only eat around 60KB each. 900,000 of them ate only 55GB on a 128GB machine. So even a million processes is not out of the question, depending on the cpu requirements for those processes. Today's modern machines can be stuffed with enormous amounts of memory. Of course, our PIDs are currently limited to 6 digits, so a million is kinda the upper limit in terms of discrete user processes (verses pthreads which are less restricted). I'd rather not go to 7 digits (yet). CFT: Driver for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2017-August/066783.html) Following patch [1] adds support for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens via evdev protocol. It is intended to be a native replacement of hid-multitouch.c driver found in Linux distributions and multimedia/webcamd port. Patch is made for 12-CURRENT and most probably can be applied to recent 11-STABLE and 11.1-RELEASE (not tested) How to test" 1. Apply patch [1] 2. To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines into your kernel configuration file: device wmt device usb device evdev Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): wmt_load="YES" 3. Install x11-drivers/xf86-input-evdev or x11-drivers/xf86-input-libinput port 4. Tell XOrg to use evdev or libinput driver for the device: ``` Section "ServerLayout" InputDevice "TouchScreen0" "SendCoreEvents" EndSection Section "InputDevice" Identifier "TouchScreen0" Driver "evdev" # Driver "libinput" Option "Device" "/dev/input/eventXXX" EndSection ``` Exact value of "/dev/input/eventXXX" can be obtained with evemu-record utility from devel/evemu. Note1: Currently, driver does not support pens or touchpads. Note2: wmt.ko should be kld-loaded before uhid driver to take precedence over it! Otherwise uhid can be kld-unloaded after loading of wmt. wmt review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017 Raw diff: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017.diff *** Beastie Bits BSDMag Programing Languages Infographic (https://bsdmag.org/programm_history/) t2k17 Hackathon Report: Bob Beck on buffer cache tweaks, libressl and pledge progress (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170815171854) New FreeBSD Journal (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/past-issues/resource-control/) NetBSD machines at Open Source Conference 2017 Kyoto (http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-advocacy/2017/08/10/msg000744.html) *** Feedback/Questions Dan - HDD question (http://dpaste.com/3H6TDJV) Benjamin - scrub of death (http://dpaste.com/10F086V) Jason - Router Opinion (http://dpaste.com/2D9102K) Sohrab - Thanks (http://dpaste.com/1XYYTWF) ***

Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)
Kelvin Was Left Out In the Cold – Mac Geek Gab 672

Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2017


No reason NOT to start the episode with Cool Stuff Found, so that's just what your two favorite geeks do. Then it's off to answering some questions about printer sharing, bluetooth headsets, USB-C connections, and, of course, CrashPlan! Download and enjoy!Note: Shownotes are complete! Chapters/Timestamps/Stuff mentioned: 00:00:00 Mac Geek Gab […]

Computer Talk with TAB
Computer Talk 8/26/17 Hr 1

Computer Talk with TAB

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2017 34:23


Erik and Bob take your technology questions. Erik's Fitbit reaches 10,000 steps--while he eats ice cream! Cloud backup service Crash Plan to end consumer backups. Identity theft hits "epidemic levels. Samsung "smart TV" update renders some TVs inoperable. New Toyota app punishes teens with parents' playlist when driving is unsafe. How to fix an "address mismatch" error with OpenDNS. Fixing Wi-Fi connectivity issues with a Samasung tablet. Avoiding the Microsoft "expired license" telephone scam. If you want to fight climate change, don't invest in Tesla, study says. Is it possible to defer new upgrades to the Windows 10 operating system? Troubeshooting Microsoft Outlook connection issues after a Windows 10 upgrade. Tesla's new "Model 3" electric car isn't a luxury car, but it's priced like one. "Elephant translator" translates human language into pachyderm talk. How to change to the 64-bit version of Mozilla Firefox web browser.

The Home Server Show Podcast
Surveillance Camera Shootout, Crashplan, and eero on HSS 297

The Home Server Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2016 75:52


This one has a little of everything. Backups, cameras, CrashPlan, Copy.com, OneDrive, and a follow up on eero.  World Back Up Day too! Do you have a blog? Monetize it without running ugly ads....

marchwill
50 - Furtos e imprevistos: a importância de um backup e dicas de serviços

marchwill

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2014 24:33


Já imaginou o que aconteceria se você perdesse os dados e informações que estão no seu computador, notebook ou tablet? Para evitar dores de cabeça, existe o que chamamos de backup - cópias de segurança. No podcast de hoje conversamos sobre a importância dessa prática e damos algumas dicas de serviços. CrashPlan: www.crashplan.com Ajude Junior Nannetti! http://www.kickante.com.br/campanhas/savethenannetti

Voice Over Body Shop
EWABS Episode 149 Summer 2014 Fan Hangout

Voice Over Body Shop

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2014 94:13


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxfy8oHtxXk&list=UUbH1aq5ZyQsghyjEWfDgQNQ Show Log Episode 149, July 7, 2014 Summer 2014 Fan Hangout using http://zoom.us/ 0:00:58  Show opening followed by black screen. 0:02:12  Dan (with a bird on his shoulder) and George begin.   0:04:13  Going around the Horn: Amy Snively, L.A., Calif.  http://www.amysnively.com/ Anthony Gettig, Laurium, Michigan.  http://www.gettig.net/ Conrad the Bird (with Dan Lenard) in Buffalo, N.Y. Steve Tardio, NYC to be.  http://www.stevetardio.com/ Dave Smith, Henderson, NV.  https://www.facebook.com/VegasVOguy Diana Birdsell, Huntington Beach, Calif.  https://www.facebook.com/diana.p.birdsall?fref=ts&ref=br_tf Edward Waldorf, Spanish Fort, Alabama.  https://www.facebook.com/ewaldorph?fref=ts J.S. Gilbert, South San Francisco, Calif.  http://jsgilbert.com/ Bill Lord, Alexandria, Va.  http://www.nothingrhymeswithorange.us/ Scott Chambers, Birmingham, Ala.  http://www.scottchambersvo.com/ Shelley Avellino, Albuquerque, N.M.  http://www.shelleyavellino.com/ Steven Gonzales, Baton Rouge, La.  http://stevengonzalesvo.com/ Ted Mcaleer, Sevilla, Spain. http://www.voiceoveruniverse.com/profile/TedMcaleer Larry Hudson, L.A., Calif.  http://www.larryhudsonvo.com/ Andy Coffman, http://www.topvoiceover.com/ Jerry Reed, Syracuse, N.Y.  http://jerryreed.com/ 0:14:15  The “Brady Bunch” view 0:14:47  Break 0:16:06  They're ALL back.   Welcome to Lee Pinney, Costa Mesa, Calif.  https://www.linkedin.com/pub/lee-pinney/9/892/603 0:17:19  Amy Snively makes an announcement.  EWABS fans can get $25 off registration.  The code is EWABS.  You'll get an additional code to promote FaffCamp to your associates.  They'll get $25 their registrations and you'll get $25 off for each person you sign up, up to $350 off.  Go to http://faffcamp.com/   Amy explains FaffCamp.  There are two tracks, “starting smart” and “working pro.”  The agenda is set before the event, so presentations can get honed; planned but not canned.  Registration goes from $375 to $449 on July 12.  You can take up to six months to pay.   0:26:43  Larry Hudson asks a question: He's set up and working, but doesn't have a pre-amp.  What's the difference if you spend $400-500 on a pre-amp. 0:27:27  George has clients who do just fine without a pre-amp and just plugging into a Mackey board http://www.mackie.com/products/digital_recording/index.html.  That's all you need if you're doing all your processing.  Things get more interesting if you're using ISDN.  It comes down to subtle differences. 0:28:50  J.S. comments.  Now there are more products on the market that work well.  For gaming, where audio gets heavily processed, there's a huge difference when you use a high-end pre-amp for when the audio starts to have issues.  Game voicers use high-end gear.  You can also shorten a file without getting artifact-ing at a higher level.  For the average or above-average, it may not come into to play.   0:32:02  J.S. has expensive gear because he can and he likes using it.   0:32:16  Dan comments that if you don't know what something does, you probably don't need it.  Dan uses a pre-amp for the EWABS show, but for recording, he doesn't for the sake of keeping the audio chain simpler.  Most people can't tell the difference. 0:34:30  Ted says “you want it warm.”  It often means tubes.  What makes the warm audio warm?   0:35:14  The Warm Audio brand gets discussed.  http://www.warmaudio.com/  George talks about ribbon mics.  Transformers add “warmth.” 0:36:10  Steve uses the Apogee mic.  He wants tips for auditioning in hotel rooms.  Dan says grab the quilt, go into the closet and cover yourself.   0:37:40  J.S. says to put all your clothes into the closet, use the suitcase as a table.   0:38:19  George says it's all about “damping” and reverberation issues.  Use the luggage rack and put it on the room desk.   0:39:15  Scott talks about the “Eyeball.”  He uses it with the VO 1A mic. 0:39:55  Debbie Irwin, NYC, joined the group.  http://www.debbieirwin.com/index.htm 0:40:30  Shelley asks about agents sending different formats, some long, some short.   0:41:20  Debbie says in her experience if it comes from an agent, they want the entire thing recorded.   0:42:05  Larry comments.  If it's exceedingly long, he'll ask the agent.  He'll mix up the paragraphs and not read from the top.  He'll read 1-2-3 as 2-3-1.   0:43:12   J.S. has a different experience.  He did the whole thing and they did a “lift-off” of it.  They just used the audition rather than recording the piece yet again.  He feels that if you need a watermark, you shouldn't work for that company.  There are lots of reasons why he'd want to hear the whole thing. 0:45:57  Break 0:50:02  They're backbackback. 0:50:47  Diana Birdsell has gotten comments from clients who say her audio sounds “overprocessed.”  She uses TwistedWave, normalizes to -3, declicks, and runs an effects stack.  George responds.  He says it's a good sign that they know what they're doing and bothered to tell her.  It sounds too compressed.  George she could go in an uncheck the Limiter.  And if it's still a problem, uncheck the Dynamics Processor.   0:53:10  George appreciates the feedback, it's important for him to hear when the stacks don't work as intended. 0:54:51  Dan says everybody is different and hearing it differently.  The whole point of the stack is to make it better to sound good in a crappy setting.   0:55:31  Diana is new to the 416.  She's gotten a random echo happening.  Dan and George both think the Declicker is creating the problem.  But she hears the issue before she processes.  They invite her to drop a sample in Dan's “specimen cup” at http://www.homevoiceoverstudio.com/, about halfway down the page.   0:56:57  Larry asks what she's wearing.  He points out his 416 picks up fabric movement. 0:57:49  Susan joins.  No camera.  She wonders about backups and storage.  Where should she get backup gear?  Dan talks about hard drives and the cloud, having 2-3 copies.   1:00:08  Anthony is a huge believer in Dept. of Redundancy Dept.  He likes CrashPlan, DropBox, Carbonite, or Box.com.  His wireless router died and he bought a NetGear N600, which has a USB port.  You can plug a drive into it to create a home network.   1:01:50  George says there are some issues, but a Mac Airport Extreme has a port, too.  You can backup at a friend's house.   1:02:54  Steve Gonzalez uses SSD's, solid state discs.  He works off of them as they're quicker.  George says they're expensive per gigabyte.  You buy them for performance (speed) and use hard drives for off-line storage.  George has all his stuff in the cloud. 1:05:05  J.S.  Everyone should consider using one as a “boot drive.”  He recounts his backup gear.   1:07:11  Jerry describes his backup setup.  George says his system needs discipline. 1:08:23   J.S. says you can use your own FTP.  Dan says the bottom line is back up in several places. 1:09:29  Break 1:10:31  They're back.  And they talk about Harlan Hogan's http://voiceoveressentials.com/   Harlan knows VO.  “He's been doing longer than all of our combined ages,” Dan said. 1:13:20  Thanks to Edge Studio, http://www.edgestudio.com/.   The 4th weekend in August, there's a Poker Classic to raise money for the LaFontaine lab. 1:14:17  Shelley asks if anyone from Edge is going to FaffCon?  George thought David, the owner is going.   1:15:58  Walt gets harassed.  Dan asks him to talk about his Studio Suit.  He has it strung like curtains.  He rolls them out when he needs them.   And they're all angled, there's no parallel surfaces.   1:18:20  Gray in Asia asked about difference between a mixer and an interface.  George explains they're apples and oranges.  In most cases, a mixer is useful for VO unless you're re-routing audio.  Some mixers have interfaces built in.   1:22:14  Around the Horn for plugs 1:22:27  Anthony:  http://www.myaudioeditor.com/ 1:23:05  Dave Smith.  The iPad Air vs Mini?  George: it comes down to how many pixels on the screen.   1:24:10  Debbie Irwin.   1:24:29  Edward.  No plugs, his website is under construction. 1:25:12  J.S. Faux Vegas. 1:25:40  Larry: in Sept. he's doing a webinar with John Florian for new VO's.  He's got some Audacity training planned, too.  Click on VO Heaven tab at his website for more. 1:26:26  Scott plugged his site. 1:26:37  Shelley: She's been doing a large, interactive website.  “Tales of Gigi” for a client in Bulgaria.  http://www.taleswithgigi.com/ 1:27:26  Steve Gonzalez:  StevenGonzalesVO.com 1:27:49  Steve Tardio—now has an extra blanket from housekeeping.  He's just finished another kid's science book, called “Alien in My Pocket.”   1:28:52  Dan: if you get a chance to see the documentary he narrates: “J Street Challenge.”  http://thejstreetchallenge.com/ 1:29:43  Thanks to donors!  Use the donation link at EWABS.com.  Clickers!  Get your clickers! 1:30:33  Congratulations to Rebecca Davis again for getting the Don LaFontaine Spirit Award. 1:30:50  EWABS Essentials are growing at the YouTube Channel.  (www.youtube.com/ewabsshow) 1:31:25  Bob Merkel from VoiceZam will be next week's guest.  The program has been updated! 1:31:40  Thanks to wives and staff.   1:32:15  Thanks to zoom.us. 1:32:30  Thanks to Kathy Curriden and the volunteer staff. 1:33:25  Ella joins the group. 1:33:34  Sign off by the whole group. 1:34:13  End of show. 

BSD Now
21: Tendresse for Ten

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2014 107:05


This time on the show, we've got some great news for OpenBSD, as well as the scoop on FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE - yes it's finally here! We're gonna talk to Colin Percival about running FreeBSD 10 on EC2 and lots of other interesting stuff. After that, we'll be showing you how to do some bandwidth monitoring and network performance testing in a combo tutorial. We've got a round of your questions and the latest news, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE is out (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.0R/announce.html) The long awaited, giant release of FreeBSD is now official and ready to be downloaded (http://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ISO-IMAGES-amd64/10.0/) One of the biggest releases in FreeBSD history, with tons of new updates Some features include: LDNS/Unbound replacing BIND, Clang by default (no GCC anymore), native Raspberry Pi support and other ARM improvements, bhyve, hyper-v support, AMD KMS, VirtIO, Xen PVHVM in GENERIC, lots of driver updates, ZFS on root in the installer, SMP patches to pf that drastically improve performance, Netmap support, pkgng by default, wireless stack improvements, a new iSCSI stack, FUSE in the base system... the list goes on and on (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.0R/relnotes.html) Start up your freebsd-update or do a source-based upgrade *** OpenSSH 6.5 CFT (https://lists.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-dev/2014-January/031987.html) Our buddy Damien Miller (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_12_18-cryptocrystalline) announced a Call For Testing for OpenSSH 6.5 Huge, huge release, focused on new features rather than bugfixes (but it includes those too) New ciphers, new key formats, new config options, see the mailing list for all the details Should be in OpenBSD 5.5 in May, look forward to it - but also help test on other platforms! *** DIY NAS story, FreeNAS 9.2.1-BETA (http://blog.brianmoses.net/2014/01/diy-nas-2014-edition.html) Another new blog post about FreeNAS! Instead of updating the older tutorials, the author started fresh and wrote a new one for 2014 "I did briefly consider suggesting nas4free for the EconoNAS blog, since it's essentially a fork off the FreeNAS tree but may run better on slower hardware, but ultimately I couldn't recommend anything other than FreeNAS" Really long article with lots of nice details about his setup, why you might want a NAS, etc. Speaking of FreeNAS, they released 9.2.1-BETA (http://www.freenas.org/whats-new/2014/01/freenas-9-2-1-beta-now-ready-for-download.html) with lots of bugfixes *** OpenBSD needed funding for electricity.. and they got it (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7069889) Briefly mentioned at the end of last week's show, but has blown up over the internet since OpenBSD in the headlines of major tech news sites: slashdot, zdnet, the register, hacker news, reddit, twitter.. thousands of comments They needed about $20,000 to cover electric costs for the server rack in Theo's basement (http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg) Lots of positive reaction from the community helping out so far, and it appears they have reached their goal (http://www.openbsdfoundation.org/campaign2104.html) and got $100,000 in donations From Bob Beck: "we have in one week gone from being in a dire situation to having a commitment of approximately $100,000 in donations to the foundation" This is a shining example of the BSD community coming together, and even the Linux people realizing how critical BSD is to the world at large *** Interview - Colin Percival - cperciva@freebsd.org (mailto:cperciva@freebsd.org) / @cperciva (https://twitter.com/cperciva) FreeBSD on Amazon EC2 (http://www.daemonology.net/freebsd-on-ec2/), backups with Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/), 10.0-RELEASE, various topics Tutorial Bandwidth monitoring and testing (http://www.bsdnow.tv/tutorials/vnstat-iperf) News Roundup pfSense talk at Tokyo FreeBSD Benkyoukai (https://blog.pfsense.org/?p=1176) Isaac Levy will be presenting "pfSense Practical Experiences: from home routers, to High-Availability Datacenter Deployments" He's also going to be looking for help to translate the pfSense documentation into Japanese The event is on February 17, 2014 if you're in the Tokyo area *** m0n0wall 1.8.1 released (http://m0n0.ch/wall/downloads.php) For those who don't know, m0n0wall is an older BSD-based firewall OS that's mostly focused on embedded applications pfSense was forked from it in 2004, and has a lot more active development now They switched to FreeBSD 8.4 for this new version Full list of updates in the changelog This version requires at least 128MB RAM and a disk/CF size of 32MB or more, oh no! *** Ansible and PF, plus NTP (http://blather.michaelwlucas.com/archives/1933) Another blog post from our buddy Michael Lucas (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_11_06-year_of_the_bsd_desktop) There've been some NTP amplification attacks recently (https://www.freebsd.org/security/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-14:02.ntpd.asc) in the news The post describes how he configured ntpd on a lot of servers without a lot of work He leverages pf and ansible for the configuration OpenNTPD is, not surprisingly, unaffected - use it *** ruBSD videos online (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20140115054839) Just a quick followup from a few weeks ago Theo and Henning's talks from ruBSD are now available for download There's also a nice interview with Theo *** PCBSD weekly digest (http://blog.pcbsd.org/2014/01/pc-bsd-weekly-feature-digest-5/) 10.0-RC4 images are available Wine PBI is now available for 10 9.2 systems will now be able to upgrade to version 10 and keep their PBI library *** Feedback/Questions Sha'ul writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2WQXwMASZ) Kjell-Aleksander writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2H0FURAtZ) Mike writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s21eKKPgqh) Charlie writes in (and gets a reply) (http://slexy.org/view/s21UMLnV0G) Kevin writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2SuazcfoR) ***

The Voluntary Life
103 Everything You Need To Make Long Term Travel Easy

The Voluntary Life

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2013 13:19


It has never been easier to live and work abroad. If you are self-employed and work online there is nothing to stop you. Why nor sublet your apartment for a few months and live abroad in a fascinating (and potentially cheap) destination? Here is a list of all the things that make long term travel super easy: Have your home post rerouted to friend (or commercial service) who scans it into a Dropbox account for you. If a friend does it, buy them a multi-page scanner for this. Get a professional agent to manage the sublet of your apartment back home AirBnB for renting longer term accommodation (especially for whole apartments) TripAdvisor for short term hotel stays Cloud services for file storage (e.g. dropbox, google drive) Clound services for backup (e.g. Crashplan or Backblaze) A small scanner app on your smartphone for scanning any paper you need to keep (receipts etc) when abroad Get your online banking set up for all the transaction types you will need to do Get your Credit/Debit cards set for use abroad A password manager (e.g. LastPass, 1Password) for your online passwords An E reader (e.g. a kindle, iPad) to enable you to read as many books as you want while you are away A lightweight laptop for your work A Smartphone with a nice camera for taking pictures and getting online An external encrypted drive for local storage/backup International plugs for all your devices  

EasyApple
#104: Non ci serve l'approvazione di Apple

EasyApple

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2012 45:14


Dopo tanto tempo si torna a registrare su Skype, per parlare di LTE, iTunes 11, un assurdo bug dei Promemoria, di come recuperare le foto importate nel proprio iPhone, di Fantastical, Gmail, CrashPlan e un imperdibile dizionario. Questo è davvero...