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This show has been flagged as Explicit by the host. New hosts Welcome to our new host: Marc W. Abel. Last Month's Shows Id Day Date Title Host 4326 Mon 2025-03-03 HPR Community News for February 2025 HPR Volunteers 4327 Tue 2025-03-04 Chatting with Sgoti Some Guy On The Internet 4328 Wed 2025-03-05 Use SELinux the easy way Klaatu 4329 Thu 2025-03-06 Maintaining The Remote System hairylarry 4330 Fri 2025-03-07 GIMP: Fixing Photos Ahuka 4331 Mon 2025-03-10 Re-inventing the light switch Lee 4332 Tue 2025-03-11 Top 5 mistakes every new terminal user makes Klaatu 4333 Wed 2025-03-12 A Radically Transparent Computer Without Complex VLSI Marc W. Abel 4334 Thu 2025-03-13 24-25 New Years Eve show episode 3 Honkeymagoo 4335 Fri 2025-03-14 Responce to Antoin's H P R 4 3 1 3 operat0r 4336 Mon 2025-03-17 The Everything-I-Know 20-minutes Show Antoine 4337 Tue 2025-03-18 Open Web UI operat0r 4338 Wed 2025-03-19 328eforth Brian in Ohio 4339 Thu 2025-03-20 Review of the YR01 smart lock Rho`n 4340 Fri 2025-03-21 Playing Civilization IV, Part 7 Ahuka 4341 Mon 2025-03-24 Transferring Large Data Sets hairylarry 4342 Tue 2025-03-25 How I use Git to blog on the web and gopherspace Klaatu 4343 Wed 2025-03-26 Interviewing the Redot engine Founder Celeste 4344 Thu 2025-03-27 24-25 New Years Eve show episode 4 Honkeymagoo 4345 Fri 2025-03-28 Android 2025 operat0r 4346 Mon 2025-03-31 A brief review of the Pinetab 2 Swift110 Comments this month These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows. There are 25 comments in total. Past shows There are 6 comments on 6 previous shows: hpr3967 (2023-10-17) "Unsolicited thoughts on running open source software projects" by dnt. Comment 1: Antoine on 2025-03-01: "My comment about this show" hpr4142 (2024-06-18) "A Shared Shell History With Atuin" by mnw. Comment 2: Windigo on 2025-03-12: "Appreciate the overview" hpr4276 (2024-12-23) "PWNED" by operat0r. Comment 2: operat0r on 2025-03-02: "not a robot" hpr4321 (2025-02-24) "Crux Linux" by Klaatu. Comment 1: dnt on 2025-03-05: "Messing up" hpr4323 (2025-02-26) "Good Samaritan laws, Duty to rescue in the Netherlands" by Ken Fallon. Comment 1: Some Guy on the Internet on 2025-03-05: "Great show." Comment 2: Antoine on 2025-03-05: "And in Brazil" hpr4325 (2025-02-28) "Two Software I use- Futo Keyboard and Inoreader" by Antoine. Comment 1: archer72 on 2025-03-02: "FUTO Keyboard" Comment 2: Antoine on 2025-03-02: "@#1 My setup" This month's shows There are 19 comments on 9 of this month's shows: hpr4326 (2025-03-03) "HPR Community News for February 2025" by HPR Volunteers. Comment 1: dnt on 2025-03-05: "SGOTI's mop" hpr4328 (2025-03-05) "Use SELinux the easy way" by Klaatu. Comment 1: lyunpaw@gmail.com on 2025-03-07: "Time to brick the box."Comment 2: Klaatu on 2025-03-10: "This advice comes with no warranty" hpr4329 (2025-03-06) "Maintaining The Remote System" by hairylarry. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-03-04: "Have you considered using Syncthing" hpr4330 (2025-03-07) "GIMP: Fixing Photos" by Ahuka. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-01-15: "Great Tips"Comment 2: Rother on 2025-03-08: "playback "Comment 3: Kevin O'Brien on 2025-03-08: "Processing"Comment 4: Henrik Hemrin on 2025-03-11: "Quick access to external photo editing tools from digiKam thumbnail view. "Comment 5: Kevin O'Brien on 2025-03-11: "Good tip" hpr4331 (2025-03-10) "Re-inventing the light switch" by Lee. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-03-03: "undocumented network exploit" hpr4332 (2025-03-11) "Top 5 mistakes every new terminal user makes" by Klaatu. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-03-04: "Send this back to my past self" hpr4333 (2025-03-12) "A Radically Transparent Computer Without Complex VLSI" by Marc W. Abel. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-03-04: "Everyone needs to listen to this show"Comment 2: Marc on 2025-03-07: "Reply to comment (or if a volunteer can edit it directly instead, that's fine)"Comment 3: paulj on 2025-03-19: "Dauug"Comment 4: Marc on 2025-03-24: "Hardware build road map"Comment 5: Celeste on 2025-03-24: "About the software part reliability" hpr4339 (2025-03-20) "Review of the YR01 smart lock" by Rho`n. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2025-03-11: "Unfortunately mine turned into a project."Comment 2: Trey on 2025-03-20: "Only one trip to the hardware store?" hpr4342 (2025-03-25) "How I use Git to blog on the web and gopherspace" by Klaatu. Comment 1: oxo on 2025-03-25: "Cool!" Mailing List discussions Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mailing List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under Mailman. The threaded discussions this month can be found here: https://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2025-March/thread.html Events Calendar With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to The LWN.net Community Calendar. Quoting the site: This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track events of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software. Clicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web page. Provide feedback on this episode.
This week a community resource fell offline unexpectedly. Members from all over the internet banded together to restore a community resource! -- During The Show -- 01:00 Intro Noah brought the warm weather back We need your feedback Join Geeklab (https://matrix.to/#/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) Tag Marlin 04:10 Smart Watches Original pebble inventor New pebble smartwatches available for preorder ArsTechnica (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/03/new-pebbleos-watches-with-more-battery-and-familiar-looks-are-up-for-preorder/) Steve's smartwatch use case Noah's watch Pine Time (https://pine64.com/product/pinetime-smartwatch-sealed/) Fitness Features Eric Migicovsky doesn't stick with companies AsteroidOS (https://asteroidos.org/) BangleJS (https://banglejs.com/) 28:32 News Wire GIMP 3.0 - gimp.org (https://www.gimp.org/news/2025/03/16/gimp-3-0-released/) Digikam 8.6 - digikam.org (https://www.digikam.org/news/2025-03-15-8.6.0_release_announcement/) Peertube 7.1 - joinpeertube.org (https://joinpeertube.org/news/release-7.1) Gstreamer 1.26 - freedesktop.org (https://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/releases/1.26/) KDE Frameworks 6.12 - kde.org (https://kde.org/announcements/frameworks/6/6.12.0/) End of Nouveau OpenGL Driver - itsfoss.com (https://news.itsfoss.com/mesa-zink-nvk-switch/) Debian Bookworm 12.10 - debian.org (https://www.debian.org/releases/bookworm/#:~:text=Debian%2012.10%20was%20released%20on,release%20and%20the%20Release%20Notes.) Ubuntu's Rust Coreutils - ubuntu.com (https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/carefully-but-purposefully-oxidising-ubuntu/56995) GitHub Actions Hack - infoworld.com (https://www.infoworld.com/article/3847178/thousands-of-open-source-projects-at-risk-from-hack-of-github-actions-tool.html) Open Source OSV Scanner - gbhackers.com (https://gbhackers.com/google-launches-open-source-osv-scanner/) Linux Kernel Use-After-Free Vulnerability - gbhackers.com (https://gbhackers.com/poc-exploit-released-linux-kernel-vulnerability/) Kagent - thenewstack.io (https://thenewstack.io/meet-kagent-open-source-framework-for-ai-agents-in-kubernetes/) Tencent Open Source Model - bloomberg.com (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-18/tencent-touts-open-source-ai-models-to-turn-text-into-3d-visuals) Mistral Small 3.1 - techzine.eu (https://www.techzine.eu/news/applications/129697/mistral-ai-unveils-small-powerful-and-open-source-ai-model/) - venturebeat.com (https://venturebeat.com/ai/mistral-ai-drops-new-open-source-model-that-outperforms-gpt-4o-mini-with-fraction-of-parameters/) 29:50 Linuxrocks.online Outage Noah's travel story Awake for 30+ hours Wakes up to DMs, emails, online posts, etc Linux Rocks server is down Linux Rocks server grew organically Moved into Altispeed Egan MN data center SSH connected but then kicked you out Altispeed got pulled into it User wasn't in the libvertd group Organic way information spreads on the internet Glad to see people calm down after learning someone is in the hospital Linux Rocks is now monitored by LibreNMS Michael is donating a new server Thank you for polite and kind notification To those not so kind, please consider what you are getting for free Reddit post (https://www.reddit.com/r/Mastodon/comments/1jblofg/linuxrocksonline_been_down_for_nearly_48_hours/) Everything was documented 49:45 Continuity Plan Reach out to Nerd friends Interest Old laptops show up on Noah's desk Enabling people through technology -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/433) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
There's releases, bug fixes, and Windows news. We covered CAD, DigiKam, and Wine. Then new hardware and support, EPEL on WSL, and the Free Software Foundation's de-blobbed kenel. Then finally we cover the latest drama in the kernel and Code of Conduct enforcement. For tips we have pw-container, kdocker on Wayland, and Qucs-S. You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/3ALweut and we'll see you next time! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Jeff Massie and Ken McDonald Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.
Mike McGrath joins the program and we get an update from Red Hat. This week we dig into week 2 of Steve's Desktop Linux struggle. -- During The Show -- 01:00 Hex OS - Craig Self host Files Pictures Home Assistant Jellyfin Wants a GUI Like the idea of ZFS Snapshots Go simple You should know how to fix things Cockpit 11:25 News Wire Wordpress 6.7 - wordpress.org (https://wordpress.org/documentation/wordpress-version/version-6-7/) Postgres 17.1 - postgresql.org (https://www.postgresql.org/docs/release/17.1/) Peazip 10.1 - github.io (https://peazip.github.io/changelog.html) DigiKam 8.5 - digikam.org (https://www.digikam.org/news/2024-11-16-8.5.0_release_announcement/) Systemd 256.8 - github.com (https://github.com/systemd/systemd/releases/tag/v256.8) Linux 6.12 - lwn.net (https://lwn.net/Articles/997958/) GNU-Linux 6.12 - phoronix.com (https://www.phoronix.com/news/GNU-Linux-Libre-6.12) Quadruple Workqueue Concurrency - phoronix.com (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.13-Workqueues) Q4OS 5.7 - q4os.org (https://q4os.org/blog.html) RHEL 9.5 - github.io (https://peazip.github.io/changelog.html) 12:33 Mike McGrath Interview Drama around RHEL source code Fedora and Streams Accelerators How does Red Hat keep up Xorg and Wayland Remote Desktop on Wayland ELS 32bit Package Mode vs Image Mode RHEL AI Low power computers/systems Micro DNF UBI OS Tree Bootstrap/Build kit Red Hat AI Licensing What does open source mean to you? 33:43 Steve's Desktop Adventure Issues with desktop going to sleep Build on your knowledge base NixOS Local Flatpak Cache Flatpak size Ansible Why multiple files Outside and inside chroot Cinnamon Desktop -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/416) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
This show has been flagged as Clean by the host. Today I will talk about digitizing analog photos. I will talk about two methods. I have scanners from different manufacturers, flat bed scanner and dedicated film scanner. Each scanner is delivered with software. Each software is generally good. But it is a problem to manage several software. Secondly, none of them works for Linux operating system. I wanted to simplify my software learning, so I wanted one software for all my existing and any future scanner. Secondly I intended to migrate to a Linux operating system, which I now have done. Those two requirements lead me to switch over to VueScan software. I had tested VueScan before and also gotten recommendations from photographic friends. VueScan is a proprietary software made by a small family run company. It’s available for Linux, Windows and macOS. VueScan supports very many hardware scanners. I do not know about any better software for Linux and is maybe also the best choice for any operating system. I do not regret my switch to VueScan. A second method to digitize photos is reproduction with a camera. That is to use a camera to shoot a photo of the photo. Some say it is the superior technology. I don’t know. But as I am coming from the scanning technology and starting to explore the repro technology, I will give my early thoughts from that perspective. My initial plan has been to use repro photography for prints that are glued into albums and therefore difficult to manage in the scanner. It is also an excellent method to digitize other papers in book format. But I have not really started to do that. However, a while ago I started to look into 6x9 cm negatives. My scanner can just manage 6x9. But I do not have a fixture for 6x9. So it is both somewhat tricky to position the negative as well as to keep it flat. A thin plexiglass plate might be possible to use to keep it flat. Even without plexiglass, I have tested I can get well acceptable result with the scanner. I started to try out the repro method. I have not come so far in my trials that I can decide which is the best method for me. My camera is a modest camera compared to state of the art. My flat bed scanner should give better or comparable resolution than my modest digital camera. The fixture I have for repro do not keep the negative fully flat, because 6x9 is a rather big size. So I plan to explore if I can improve quality with a plexiglass plate above the negative. An issue with the repro method is to keep all angles in control, to mount the camera in exactly correct angle in relation to the object. Focus can also be another issue. I consider it is better to use manual focus rather than auto focus. When I take the repro photos, I have the camera connected to a laptop and I use the Entangle software to control the camera settings. I can use the camera live view to position the object as well as to focus. I use RawTherapee software to convert the negative photo to a normal photo. RawTherapee comes with pre-installed profiles for this process. The default profile values can be adjusted and also stored as new personal profiles. A major advantage of the repro method compared to the scanner method is the speed. Once all is configured, it takes one hundred of a second or so to do the digitize itself, while it can take minutes with the scanner. I use digiKam as my photo catalog software. All software I currently use with the exception of VueScan are free and open source. I use all on Linux operating system, some of them are available on other platforms. I include links to their websites in the show notes. If you have any opinion or experience on digitizing analog photos, I will be happy to read your comments or listen to your show. Software VueScan: https://www.hamrick.com/ Entangle: https://entangle-photo.org/ RawTherapee: https://rawtherapee.com/ digiKam: https://www.digikam.org/ Provide feedback on this episode.
In two earlier episodes I have been talking about digiKam photo management software. I hope to come back to that topic in another episode in the future. But not today. Today I will talk about what happened to me about two weeks ago. Maybe it was because I had used the hibernate state, which I rarely use, that caused my laptop to behave somewhat strange. So I decided to turn it off. It was my Lenovo Thinkpad T460p laptop, running Linux Mint Debian Edition. So I turned it off the normal way with the soft button inside the operating system. But instead of power off I was shown a full terminal screen with a lot of text what it was doing. But it never came to the conclusion to turn off. I have learned that in those situations, although tempting, that on Linux I should not force turn off with the physical mechanical power button. I have tried that before on another Linux laptop, and it was not a success, rather the opposite. What I should do with Linux is to talk with electrodes directly to the central brain, or in other words, call the Linux kernel with help of a system request and by that sidestep the operating system. A System Request is done with the SysRq key on the keyboard. In this situation I did the reisub key sequence with a system request: If I hold the System Request key together with the Alternate Alt key, and when still holding them down, I type the letters r, e, i, s, u and b, one by one in a very slow pace, I take seconds between them. Then I release all keys and the machine reboots. This was very successful for me and the laptop has since then worked as normal. I use an external full size keyboard that has a System Request key. But not all laptops has such a key any more. System Request can be reached also on all or most of those laptops with some key combination. But that key combination varies between manufacturers and models. In the show notes I add a link to a How to geek article about reisub as well as to Wikipedia about System Request: How-To Geek: Cleanly Restarting Your System. Use the Magic SysRq Key on Linux to Fix Frozen X Servers, Cleanly Reboot, and Run Other Low-Level Commands Wikipedia: Magic SysRq key
table td.shrink { white-space:nowrap } hr.thin { border: 0; height: 0; border-top: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); border-bottom: 1px solid rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.3); } New hosts Welcome to our new host: Moss Bliss. Last Month's Shows Id Day Date Title Host 4108 Wed 2024-05-01 What's in my bag swift110 4109 Thu 2024-05-02 The future of HPR knightwise 4110 Fri 2024-05-03 Playing Civilization III, Part 2 Ahuka 4111 Mon 2024-05-06 HPR Community News for April 2024 HPR Volunteers 4112 Tue 2024-05-07 JSON and VENDORS and AUTH ohh my! operat0r 4113 Wed 2024-05-08 Today I Learnt, sed hold/pattern space use. Some Guy On The Internet 4114 Thu 2024-05-09 Introduction to jq - part 2 Dave Morriss 4115 Fri 2024-05-10 Tagging music with Beets dnt 4116 Mon 2024-05-13 Response to 4109: Building community without SEO hobs 4117 Tue 2024-05-14 JAMBOREE ! operat0r 4118 Wed 2024-05-15 Toil versus Livelihood dnt 4119 Thu 2024-05-16 Cov's Jams 003 Cov 4120 Fri 2024-05-17 South Carolina to Home Ahuka 4121 Mon 2024-05-20 RODE wireless microphones Clinton Roy 4122 Tue 2024-05-21 The Conference for Creative Use of the Radio Spectrum in Open Systems Ken Fallon 4123 Wed 2024-05-22 KeepassXC Update Some Guy On The Internet 4124 Thu 2024-05-23 Developing a project Lee 4125 Fri 2024-05-24 Installing Home Assistant Operating System (HAOS), on a x86-64 machine Ken Fallon 4126 Mon 2024-05-27 Podcasting for Newbies Moss Bliss 4127 Tue 2024-05-28 Retro fun with the GPi 2 cases Kevie 4128 Wed 2024-05-29 30 years of the internet knightwise 4129 Thu 2024-05-30 How I found Hacker Public Radio Henrik Hemrin 4130 Fri 2024-05-31 Playing Civilization III, Part 3 Ahuka Comments this month These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows. There are 25 comments in total. Past shows There is 1 comment on 1 previous show: hpr4087 (2024-04-02) "Getting started with the digiKam photo management software" by Henrik Hemrin. Comment 1: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-05-13: "Good support from digiKam developers and community" This month's shows There are 24 comments on 7 of this month's shows: hpr4109 (2024-05-02) "The future of HPR " by knightwise. Comment 1: Dirk on 2024-05-02: "The future about HPR"Comment 2: Ken Fallon on 2024-05-02: "Thanks for volunteering"Comment 3: Knightwise on 2024-05-04: "Alt Hoeselt Calling :)"Comment 4: knightwise on 2024-05-04: "Hacker Public Radio as "brown noise?" "Comment 5: mpardo on 2024-05-04: "Interesting episode"Comment 6: enistello on 2024-05-05: "The future of HPR"Comment 7: Ken Fallon on 2024-05-06: "Active for a given value of active."Comment 8: Ken Fallon on 2024-05-06: "On proprietary platforms" hpr4112 (2024-05-07) "JSON and VENDORS and AUTH ohh my!" by operat0r. Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2024-05-31: "The answer is always jq" hpr4115 (2024-05-10) "Tagging music with Beets" by dnt. Comment 1: kdmurray on 2024-05-16: "Just what the doctor ordered" hpr4116 (2024-05-13) "Response to 4109: Building community without SEO" by hobs. Comment 1: Knightwise on 2024-05-13: "Just a small correction."Comment 2: kdmurray on 2024-05-13: "Ok but..."Comment 3: Ken Fallon on 2024-05-15: "Actual Actions ?"Comment 4: knightwise on 2024-05-17: "Low hanging fruit"Comment 5: norrist on 2024-05-19: "Mastodon Comments" hpr4118 (2024-05-15) "Toil versus Livelihood" by dnt. Comment 1: Bob on 2024-05-15: "We want free time but what we get is more less paid toil"Comment 2: kdmurray on 2024-05-16: "Deep Thought"Comment 3: Kevin O'Brien on 2024-05-18: "Bravo!"Comment 4: Laindir on 2024-05-20: "Half the problem"Comment 5: dnt on 2024-05-21: "Re: Laindir"Comment 6: dnt on 2024-05-21: "Re: kdmurray" hpr4124 (2024-05-23) "Developing a project" by Lee. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-05-23: "Not now... another time."Comment 2: dnt on 2024-05-25: "projects" hpr4128 (2024-05-29) "30 years of the internet" by knightwise. Comment 1: zen_floater on 2024-05-30: "WVDiAL" Mailing List discussions Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under Mailman. The threaded discussions this month can be found here: https://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2024-May/thread.html Events Calendar With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to The LWN.net Community Calendar. Quoting the site: This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track events of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software. Clicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web page. Any other business Proposed policy change In the past month we were asked to remove a show that had been added to the database, and uploaded to archive.org. This was done, but: The amount of work to do this type of change is not trivial. It's not possible to remove archive.org items, only to remove their contents and replace them with whatever comes from the replacement show. The processes involved in this deletion and replacement are not complex but are somewhat labour-intensive. There are ramifications into existing feeds (podcast players cache episode details and do not replace them, etc). It is proposed that the policy be changed to discourage this, except in severe cases - perhaps those with copyright or other legal consequences. Obviously, we normally take great care that incoming shows are unlikely to trigger such problems in the first place. The Future Feed There is a feed which is normally referred to as the "Future Feed", which can be found on the RSS Syndication page. It receives shows which are posted out of order as they come in and may be replaced/reposted if errors are found. This is intended as a means to find issues with metadata or the audio quality of new shows before they hit the main feed. Recently a show was posted to this feed which was truncated. Unfortunately, although the Janitors and a number or listeners follow this feed, this truncation was not spotted until the show was released. It would be much appreciated if you could assist with watching this feed for errors in the future. Please contact the Janitors if you notice anything. Janitorial Team We have had some recent contributions to the development of the HPR software from norrist and kdmurray. We also added them to the "HPR Janitor's Closet" on Matrix to speed up discussions about open tickets. If anyone else wishes to help out with the development please do so by creating an account on our Gitea server. Denial of Service Attacks on the Internet Archive There have been a number of DDoS attacks on this service in the recent past. Jason Scott (@textfiles@mastodon.archive.org), Free-Range Archivist at the Internet Archive, has been mentioning this on Mastodon. These attacks mean that we can sometimes be delayed when we need to upload shows to the IA.
table td.shrink { white-space:nowrap } hr.thin { border: 0; height: 0; border-top: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); border-bottom: 1px solid rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.3); } New hosts Welcome to our new host: Dave Hingley. Last Month's Shows Id Day Date Title Host 4086 Mon 2024-04-01 HPR Community News for March 2024 HPR Volunteers 4087 Tue 2024-04-02 Getting started with the digiKam photo management software Henrik Hemrin 4088 Wed 2024-04-03 Today I Learnt more Bash tips Some Guy On The Internet 4089 Thu 2024-04-04 Modifying a Python script with some help from ChatGPT MrX 4090 Fri 2024-04-05 Playing Civilization III, Part 1 Ahuka 4091 Mon 2024-04-08 Test Driven Development Demo norrist 4092 Tue 2024-04-09 More man-talk. Some Guy On The Internet 4093 Wed 2024-04-10 Installing postmarketOS on a PINE64 PinePhone Claudio Miranda 4094 Thu 2024-04-11 One year of Linux Daniel Persson 4095 Fri 2024-04-12 Twenty seven years of Linux Deltaray 4096 Mon 2024-04-15 Powers of two Deltaray 4097 Tue 2024-04-16 Will they take our jobs? Of course they will. dodddummy 4098 Wed 2024-04-17 Road trips without GPS Trey 4099 Thu 2024-04-18 Introducing Home Automation and Home Assistant Ken Fallon 4100 Fri 2024-04-19 Charleston, South Carolina Ahuka 4101 Mon 2024-04-22 A I O M G operat0r 4102 Tue 2024-04-23 Re:HPR 3133 More MPV Quick Tips Archer72 4103 Wed 2024-04-24 What's in my bag? Dave Hingley 4104 Thu 2024-04-25 Introduction to jq - part 1 Dave Morriss 4105 Fri 2024-04-26 My story how I found a cure for my obesity Jeroen Baten 4106 Mon 2024-04-29 My tribute to feeds Henrik Hemrin 4107 Tue 2024-04-30 Response to HPR #4065 swift110 Comments this month These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows. There are 21 comments in total. Past shows There are 2 comments on 2 previous shows: hpr3868 (2023-05-31) "News." by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 2: elmussol on 2024-04-05: "George Santos" hpr4075 (2024-03-15) "Making a Pomodoro Timer" by norrist. Comment 2: operat0r on 2024-04-10: "ADD" This month's shows There are 19 comments on 10 of this month's shows: hpr4086 (2024-04-01) "HPR Community News for March 2024" by HPR Volunteers. Comment 1: Dave Morriss on 2024-04-01: "Senior moment: diatribe"Comment 2: Some Guy on the Internet on 2024-04-01: "@Dave Morriss" hpr4092 (2024-04-09) "More man-talk." by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 1: folky on 2024-04-09: "Oh no"Comment 2: Mad Sweeney on 2024-04-10: "Squeezing out a show" hpr4094 (2024-04-11) "One year of Linux" by Daniel Persson. Comment 1: AaronB on 2024-04-11: "Bugs in Linux"Comment 2: Folky on 2024-04-12: "Thank you"Comment 3: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-04-12: "Enjoyable to learn about your Linux use case and experience" hpr4095 (2024-04-12) "Twenty seven years of Linux" by Deltaray. Comment 1: Nick on 2024-04-12: "Correction"Comment 2: Deltaray on 2024-04-13: "Re: Correction"Comment 3: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-04-13: "Interesting review of your Linux softwares" hpr4096 (2024-04-15) "Powers of two" by Deltaray. Comment 1: Windigo on 2024-04-15: "Very enjoyable episode"Comment 2: brian-in-ohio on 2024-04-17: "Another example"Comment 3: Dave Morriss on 2024-04-17: "8388607" hpr4097 (2024-04-16) "Will they take our jobs? Of course they will." by dodddummy. Comment 1: dodddummy on 2024-04-16: "The next thing"Comment 2: dodddummy on 2024-04-20: "More improvements" hpr4098 (2024-04-17) "Road trips without GPS" by Trey. Comment 1: archer72 on 2024-04-13: "Re:Road trips without GPS" hpr4099 (2024-04-18) "Introducing Home Automation and Home Assistant" by Ken Fallon. Comment 1: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-04-26: "Looking forward to learn about Home Assistant" hpr4103 (2024-04-24) "What's in my bag?" by Dave Hingley. Comment 1: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-04-26: "Thanks for your show" hpr4105 (2024-04-26) "My story how I found a cure for my obesity" by Jeroen Baten. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-04-26: "Thank you for sharing." Events Calendar With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to The LWN.net Community Calendar. Quoting the site: This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track events of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software. Clicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web page. Any other business Craig Maloney, host of the Open Metal Cast We received the sad news that fellow podcaster and host of the Open Metal Cast, Craig Maloney passed away. Obituary Markdown issue in show notes Syntax highlighting for fenced code blocks. An issue was raised on the Gitea repository for the hpr_generator. Show notes using Markdown fenced blocks which specify a language (e.g. python) are not being syntax highlighted as expected. This was turned off because the highlighting is implemented as HTML ( and tags) which was stripped by software on archive.org when the notes were uploaded. In case this restriction has been lifted, we will try uploading an example to see if highlighting is now available.
Getting started with the digiKam photo management software. In hpr4071 I talked about my migration from Adobe Photoshop Elements and Lightroom to digiKam. Today I will give you some suggestions to getting started with digiKam, based on my experience and my opinion. You find the digiKam website at https://www.digikam.org/. On the documentation page you find a good and exhaustive documentation. The big user manual can be read online or downloaded as an epub book. I suggest you browse the manual before you install digiKam. My second suggestion is that you go to the Support page on the digiKam site and look at the Mailing List Subscription section. You can browse the mailing list archive online. But I really recommend you to also join the mailing list. It is a very active mailing list where also the main developers participates actively. Many questions are specific and may not be of interest to you. But I have found that I learn a lot about digiKam, its capabilities and other ways of working with photos than I have thought of. Of course I also learn about issues. I have asked some questions myself and also contributed with answers. I highly recommend you to join the mailing list. Thirdly, before you install digiKam, I suggest you copy a couple of your photos into a new sample folder. When you start digiKam for the first time a guide starts to help you to configure initial settings. One configuration is to tell digiKam where your photos are located. I suggest you use this sample folder only. Later on you add your real photo folders and you can also at the same screen delete the sample folder from digiKam. I suggest this because then you can consider settings in more detail first which includes the settings for meta data import to digiKam. Forthly, consider also where you want to store the digiKam databases. Myself, I created a folder for them at the top level of my home catalog. But you can store them wherever you want to. Install digiKam. Go to the digiKam settings. There are a lot of settings. I will focus only on meta data settings. DigiKam stores what you do in its own databases. That is mandatory. In the settings, it is possible to select what should be written to metadata and not. Meta data settings also have settings for associated files, which most of all is about xmp side cars. You can select that digiKam should read from associated files. This is important to decide before your photo collection is imported into digiKam. If you forget, it is possible to read meta data again after you change settings. Then there is an option if digiKam should write to side cars or not. And if yes, if it should write to both side cars and the object, or only if the object is write protected. Next I want to highlight the tick box if Associated files should be compatible with commercial programs. This needs further explanation: Default in digiKam is to have separate xmp side cars for each type of photo file. For example, if you have a photo stored both as jpg and raw, they will have separate side cars. This indeed has its advantages but is in my knowledge not according to xmp side car standard. According to standard, which digiKam refers to as commercial, the jpg and raw share the same sidecar. For example Adobe Lightroom uses the commercial method. Examples to clarify: DigiKam side car file syntax: photo1.jpg.xmp and photo1.raw.xmp. Standard/commercial file syntax: photo1.xmp. I highly recommend you to spend an hour or two to review all settings, not only meta data, before you start to use digiKam for your real photos. If there is something you do not understand, go to the documentation and do not hesitate to consult the digiKam mailing list.
table td.shrink { white-space:nowrap } hr.thin { border: 0; height: 0; border-top: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); border-bottom: 1px solid rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.3); } New hosts Welcome to our new host: Henrik Hemrin. Last Month's Shows Id Day Date Title Host 4065 Fri 2024-03-01 Framework 13 (13th gen Intel) review Noodlez 4066 Mon 2024-03-04 HPR Community News for February 2024 HPR Volunteers 4067 Tue 2024-03-05 Hacking AI Models to Protect your Livelihood hobs 4068 Wed 2024-03-06 Replacing a lightbulb in a microwave Oven MrX 4069 Thu 2024-03-07 Passwords and Bitwarden news. Some Guy On The Internet 4070 Fri 2024-03-08 Civilization III Ahuka 4071 Mon 2024-03-11 Migration to digiKam as Digital Asset Management (DAM) Henrik Hemrin 4072 Tue 2024-03-12 Piper text to speech engine Archer72 4073 Wed 2024-03-13 Is the 1990 documentary "Cyberpunk" worth watching today? Trixter 4074 Thu 2024-03-14 Jade Empire Daniel Persson 4075 Fri 2024-03-15 Making a Pomodoro Timer norrist 4076 Mon 2024-03-18 WLED House Lights! operat0r 4077 Tue 2024-03-19 FFMPEG Series: Joining and Splitting files Mr. Young 4078 Wed 2024-03-20 Learning to read music, part two: pitch enistello 4079 Thu 2024-03-21 The Corresponding Source Ken Fallon 4080 Fri 2024-03-22 Georgia to South Carolina Ahuka 4081 Mon 2024-03-25 The Oh No! News. Some Guy On The Internet 4082 Tue 2024-03-26 No swans at Swanston Dave Morriss 4083 Wed 2024-03-27 Drivecast: Man-talk. Some Guy On The Internet 4084 Thu 2024-03-28 Cloud learning Daniel Persson 4085 Fri 2024-03-29 Android User Land Google Assistant GPT operat0r Comments this month These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows. There are 21 comments in total. Past shows There are 5 comments on 3 previous shows: hpr3060 (2020-04-24) "Running a local imap server" by Ken Fallon. Comment 1: Somebdy on 2024-03-19: "Nothing in particular" Comment 2: Ken Fallon on 2024-03-20: "Very suspicious comment." hpr4062 (2024-02-27) "HPR Music Series? - How will it go for the girl and me?" by Fred Black. Comment 3: brian-in-ohio on 2024-03-01: "Good show" Comment 4: norrist on 2024-03-02: "I loved the Music" hpr4063 (2024-02-28) "Re: ChatGPT Output is not compatible with CC-BY-SA " by dnt. Comment 1: brian-in-ohio on 2024-03-01: "Amen" This month's shows There are 16 comments on 9 of this month's shows: hpr4067 (2024-03-05) "Hacking AI Models to Protect your Livelihood" by hobs. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-03-05: "Dejavu... Is this the same as HPR4055?" hpr4068 (2024-03-06) "Replacing a lightbulb in a microwave Oven" by MrX. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-03-06: "Nicely done."Comment 2: Ken Fallon on 2024-03-08: "Be very careful" hpr4069 (2024-03-07) "Passwords and Bitwarden news." by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 1: Deltaray on 2024-03-10: "Thanks for the shout out" hpr4071 (2024-03-11) "Migration to digiKam as Digital Asset Management (DAM)" by Henrik Hemrin. Comment 1: Kevin O'Brien on 2024-03-15: "Good show!" hpr4073 (2024-03-13) "Is the 1990 documentary "Cyberpunk" worth watching today?" by Trixter. Comment 1: HPR Listener on 2024-03-16: "Restoration on archive.org"Comment 2: Trixter on 2024-03-18: "A slightly better version" hpr4075 (2024-03-15) "Making a Pomodoro Timer" by norrist. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-03-15: "Great project" hpr4077 (2024-03-19) "FFMPEG Series: Joining and Splitting files" by Mr. Young. Comment 1: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-03-20: "Useful to learn how ffmpeg can be used" hpr4078 (2024-03-20) "Learning to read music, part two: pitch" by enistello. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-03-20: "Desperate plea for a drummer to respond?" hpr4081 (2024-03-25) "The Oh No! News." by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 1: Trey on 2024-03-25: "Pearl clutching"Comment 2: hpr listener on 2024-03-25: "Unnecessary insult"Comment 3: Ken Fallon on 2024-03-26: "@hpr listener"Comment 4: Some Guy on the Internet on 2024-03-26: "Desperately, with white knuckles, clutching pearls."Comment 5: Henrik Hemrin on 2024-03-27: "/e/OS - an open source Android alternative"Comment 6: Kevin O'Brien on 2024-03-28: "Good Show" Mailing List discussions Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under Mailman. The threaded discussions this month can be found here: https://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2024-March/thread.html Events Calendar With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to The LWN.net Community Calendar. Quoting the site: This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track events of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software. Clicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web page. Any other business Many Podcatchers don't show the episode author It seems that the author fields in RSS and Atom feeds are not shown by a number of Podcatchers. This field is intended to show the author details, and with HPR shows it contains an obfuscated email address and a name: ken.nospam@nospam.fallon.ie (Ken Fallon) The lack of this information makes knowing who created a given HPR show difficult to determine before listening to it. A question has been raised as to whether we could include the author details at the start of the show notes. Comments are requested from the Community as to whether this would be a useful addition. The Corresponding Source - renamed podcast The Corresponding Source (formerly Free as in Freedom) is a bi-weekly oggcast, hosted and presented by Bradley M. Kuhn and Karen Sandler. The discussion includes legal, policy, and many other issues in the Free, Libre, and Open Source Software (FLOSS) world. Occasionally, guests join Bradley and Karen to discuss various topics regarding FLOSS. See HPR show 4079 HPR changes The correspondent pages which show details of a particular correspondent (host), and lists their shows, have been enhanced to include the profile which has been uploaded by the host. This was present on the old site but was omitted on the static site. This was issue number 181 on the Gitea site, which has been closed. Example: Host 30, Ken Fallon Return of OggCamp There are plans to hold OggCamp 2024 in Manchester, UK this year, after an absence of 5 years. It will be on October 12th and 13th at the The Manchester Conference Centre in the Pendulum Hotel near Picadilly Station, where the last OggCamp was held. Details may be found on the OggCamp website, and announcements will be made on social media sites.
Librement Linux - S02E19 - Enregistré le Dimanche 24 mars 2024 Avec : Cédric - Le Tux Masqué - STEvE 02:45 Le billet : L'excès de confiance précède la chute 08:45 Les actualités Voici Tazama, une application open source pour la prévention de la fraude https://goodtech.info/voici-tazama-une-application-open-source-pour-la-prevention-de-la-fraude/ L'encombrement des sites Web modernes conduit certains d'entre eux à charger jusqu'à 21 Mo de données pour une seule page https://web.developpez.com/actu/355448/L-encombrement-des-sites-Web-modernes-conduit-certains-d-entre-eux-a-charger-jusqu-a-21-Mo-de-donnees-pour-une-seule-page-ils-ont-parfois-des-performances-mediocres-sur-les-appareils-bas-de-gamme/ 29:14 Notre sélection des sorties de la semaine KeepassXC 2.7.7 | https://keepassxc.org/blog/2024-03-10-2.7.7-released/ Linux Kernel 6.8 | https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/03/linux-kernel-6-8-new-features OBS Studio 30.1 | https://9to5linux.com/obs-studio-30-1-released-with-av1-support-for-va-api-pipewire-camera-source KDEnlive 24.04 | https://www.numetopia.fr/kdenlive-24-02-est-disponible-quoi-de-neuf/ Digikam 8.3 | https://goodtech.info/digikam-nouvelle-version-nouveautes/ Firefox 124 | https://www.numetopia.fr/firefox-124-est-disponible-quoi-de-neuf/ GNOME 46 | https://www.numetopia.fr/gnome-46-katmandou-est-disponible-quoi-de-neuf/ The Battle for Wesnoth 1.18 | https://www.wesnoth.org/start/1.18/ 40:05 La météo de la sécurité Multiples vulnérabilités dans Google Chrome | https://www.cert.ssi.gouv.fr/avis/CERTFR-2024-AVI-0235/ Une cyberattaque sur France Travail compromet 43 millions de comptes | https://www.lemondeinformatique.fr/actualites/lire-une-cyberattaque-sur-france-travail-compromet-43-millions-de-comptes-93223.html Passe Navigo : les mails frauduleux sont de retour avec la campagne de remboursement | https://www.numerama.com/cyberguerre/1656494-passe-navigo-les-mails-frauduleux-sont-de-retour-avec-la-campagne-de-remboursement.html 50:36 Le Dossier : AdBlock Plus ou µBlock Origin ? 01:00:00 Conclusion Rejoignez-nous sur le site de Librement Linux Podcast pour écouter tous nos épisodes passionnants. Réagissez avec votre compte Fedivers à l'épisode sur le site “Librement Linux” https://www.mindcast.fr/@librementLinux_podcast ou avec la compte @librementLinux_podcast@www.mindcast.fr Quelques liens : Librement Linux RSS @letuxmasque@mamot.fr @Chaine_STEvE@mastodon.social @cedricAbonnel@piaille.fr Nous sommes impatients de vous retrouver dans le salon Matrix Librement Linux pour discuter, poser des questions et partager vos réflexions avec notre équipe et une communauté engagée. Ne manquez pas l'opportunité de vous connecter avec d'autres passionnés de Linux et de l'Open Source. Rejoignez-nous dès maintenant ! Générique début : Merci à Henrique de WavebeatsMusic Cet épisode est diffusé sous les conditions Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, excepté : les extraits musicaux les bandes sons externes et les œuvres sonores non produites par l'équipe de Librement Linux.
I talk about my migration from Adobe Photoshop Elements to digiKam as photo catalog software, or DAM Digital Asset Management as it often is referred to nowadays. My latest was release 14 which I bought 2015, which also was when I migrated from Windows to macOS. Photoshop Elements is without hesitation a good software. One major drawback is that is a proprietary software from which I cannot export data on my conditions. After a few of years on release 14 the geotagging stopped working. The error message told that this was caused by a change by Google. Adobe Photoshop Elements had a fix for this error - but only incorporated in the next release of the software. No fix was planned for my release. So to get geotagging working again, I would have to buy a new release. I also got problem that it now and then crashed and needed to be restarted. Something needed to be done. I considered if I should buy a new release of Photoshop Elements or change to any other software. At the same time I also became more attracted to Linux. I also became more interested in free and open software. A big drawback with changing to something else than Adobe is that I most certainly will loose some of the work I have put into photos in Photoshop Elements. The Photo editing data and raw conversion settings for individual photos will be lost. This is almost impossible to migrate between software. What can be done is to save what I have edited as new photos. I am fine with this, it will not stop me from changing software. Meta data is very important to me. Meta data contains not only information about the shooting from the camera itself. But also my tags, description texts and more I had added in Photoshop Elements. Meta data also includes face tagging. This goes both for digital camera photos as well as digitized analog photos. Criteria for my new software: Preferable free and open source Available on multiple platforms, in particular available on macOS and Linux That meta data can be migrated including face tagging The one that I found to best meet my criteria is digiKam. DigiKam is mostly known for its catalog capabilities. But digiKam also includes import and export functions as well as raw conversion and photo editing. My migration. Photoshop Elements stores the data in a data base. It is possible to export metadata to files and sidecars. But not all data. Face tagging cannot be exported. The name of the person can be exported but not the coordinates of the face tag which only is stored in the data base. The data base itself cannot be read by other software, except by Adobe software: Adobe Lightroom Classic can import the data from Photoshop Elements data base into its own data base. This was very important for my migration success. Lightroom can export also the face tagging. I discovered an issue with the time- and datestamps. In Photoshop Elements it is possible to give incomplete date and time, for example only state the year if I do not know all details. Already Lightroom had problem to interpret this information correctly and I had to implement a workaround with tags. In general, several time and date attributes exist and it is something to understand what is what and how each of the is defined, displayed and managed in the software. From Lightroom Classic I exported meta data including face tags to files and sidecars. And migration to digiKam worked good enough. I still have access to my Photoshop Elements database if I want to go back and check anything. My next step was to migrate from digiKam on macOS to digiKam on Linux. This migration was relatively easy. My current settings in digiKam is to always write data to sidecars, in addition to the digiKam data bases. So I copied photo files and sidecars from macOS to Linux. I took the opportunity to rearrange my folder structure. Then I imported into digiKam and digiKam built new data bases in Linux based on photos and sidecars.
This week Noah and Steve talk about their home labs and keeping on top of the projects! 03:26 News Wire Roundcube Next Cloud Merging - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Roundcube-Nextcloud) Pipewire 1.0 - ZDnet (https://www.zdnet.com/article/pipewire-1-0-linux-audio-comes-of-age/) GitLab (https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/releases) MKVtoolnix 81.0 - MKVtoolnix (https://mkvtoolnix.download/doc/NEWS.md) DigiKam 8.2 - DigiKam (https://www.digikam.org/news/2023-12-03-8.2.0_release_announcement/) Plasma 6 Beta Milestone - KDE (https://kde.org/announcements/megarelease/6/beta1/) Cinnamon - Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/cinnamon-6-0-release/) Steam Survey - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Steam-Linux-November-2023) Tails 5.20 - Tails (https://tails.net/news/version_5.20/index.en.html) Vigil LLM Scanner - Help Net Security (https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2023/11/29/vigil-llm-security-scanner/) Nous Hermes 2 Vision - Venture Beat (https://venturebeat.com/ai/new-open-source-ai-vision-model-emerges-to-take-on-chatgpt-but-it-has-issues/) 04:47 Beeper Mini 16 year old reverse engineered iMessage Prototype works Not a man in the middle Code is open source Requires Apple to playing nice Still questions UK regulations Gray area The Verge (https://www.theverge.com/2023/12/5/23987817/beeper-mini-imessage-android-reverse-engineer) 12:48 NextCloud Critical app Calendar Proton Mail Picture Sync Hardware upgrades NextCloud Memories Zotac and Brix computers up for grabs email in with how you will use them Normal users excited about features Collaborative editing DavX5 Guide for syncing iPhones (https://docs.minddripone.com/how-to/nextcloud-ios-contact-sync/) Roundcube Email hosting Benifit of nextcloud vs major hosting providers 31:39 Plex to JellyFin Plex does strange things blocking entire IP ranges blocking hosting providers sharing watch history gathers a lot of data trying to be Buying media First impressions Not the best iOS experience Nice features Cord Cutters News (https://cordcuttersnews.com/this-new-plex-feature-shares-your-weird-watch-history-with-friends-and-its-tricky-to-turn-off/) 40:54 Choosing a vHost We learn every war Centralization/decentralized tech cycle Containers Why virtual machines don't have, don't want a "pipeline" easy logic easy recovery Single points of failure 52:00 Next week Hardware considerations Write in with your questions! -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/366) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
This week Noah and Steve dig into the RESTRICT Act and the DATA Act! Your questions, your thoughts go to the front of the line. -- During The Show -- 01:30 Encrypted Journal? - Matt EncyptPad (https://github.com/evpo/EncryptPad/releases) Joplin (https://joplinapp.org/) Standard Notes (https://standardnotes.com/) Too tied to a service Separate the app from the encryption Vaults 10:45 Traveling Mailbox - Joey Local USPS unreliable USPS knows its a PMB 12:50 Alternative to GraphineOS - Vincent eOS (https://e.foundation/) 15:45 News Wire Deepin 20.9 BBS Deepin (https://bbs.deepin.org/en/post/255228) Firefox 112 Mozilla (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/112.0/releasenotes/) Digikam 8.0 Digikam (https://www.digikam.org/news/2023-04-16-8.0.0_release_announcement/) LXQt 1.3.0 LXQT (https://lxqt-project.org/release/2023/04/15/release-lxqt-1-3-0/) Proton 8.0 Gaming On Linux (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/04/valve-rolls-out-proton-80-to-further-improve-steam-deck-and-linux-gaming/) FerretDB Info World (https://www.infoworld.com/article/3693253/open-source-ferretdb-offers-drop-in-replacement-for-mongodb.html) Universal Blue ZDNET (https://www.zdnet.com/article/universal-blue-is-a-new-paradigm-for-the-linux-desktop-and-its-brilliant/) Mercedes Benz Press Release The News Stack (https://thenewstack.io/mercedes-benz-4-reasons-to-sponsor-open-source-projects/) EU AI Petition Open Petition (https://www.openpetition.eu/petition/online/securing-our-digital-future-a-cern-for-open-source-large-scale-ai-research-and-its-safety) DataBricks Dolly DataBricks (https://www.databricks.com/blog/2023/04/12/dolly-first-open-commercially-viable-instruction-tuned-llm) CRA Chilling Effect Tech Crunch (https://techcrunch.com/2023/04/18/in-letter-to-european-commission-open-source-bodies-say-cyber-resilience-act-could-have-chilling-effect-on-software-development/) Securing Open Source Software Act Security Boulevard (https://securityboulevard.com/2023/04/senate-committee-passes-securing-open-source-software-act/) Summit Schedule Yahoo Finance (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/linux-foundation-announces-schedule-embedded-120000717.html) Rancher Dev Class (https://devclass.com/2023/04/18/suse-secures-rancher-as-k8s-attack-surface-expands/) Chrome Zero Day C Soon Line (https://www.csoonline.com/article/3693259/google-urges-users-to-update-chrome-to-address-zero-day-vulnerability.html) Malicious Packages Info Security (https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/researchers-7000-malicious-open/) 18:45 KdenLive (https://kdenlive.org/) Interview Kenny Schmidt Expectations Impressed with Open Source God Strong Gym Never going back Multi Cam Editing Guides Key Framing Inkscape (https://inkscape.org/) 30:30 RESTRICT & DATA ACTs Rep McCaul (R-TX) Filed Data Act HR 1153 Sen. Mark Warner (D Va.) Full Interview with Sen. Cramer on China (https://podcast.criticalthought.show/52) China and Intel China comes after family DATA Act - Requires Executive Action RESTRICT Act allows blocking transactions Project Texas Colleges Reason.com (https://reason.com/2023/03/29/could-the-restrict-act-criminalize-the-use-of-vpns/) EFF (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/04/broad-vague-restrict-act-dangerous-substitute-comprehensive-data-privacy) Large Companies lobby actions Reach out to legislators Banning doesn't work EFF Stop Restrict Act Tool (https://act.eff.org/action/stop-the-restrict-act-and-pass-real-privacy-legislation) 52:00 Announcements Red Hat Summit SELF Call for papers -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/334) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
Themen: Vivo Pad2, Oscal Pad 13, HTC Wildfire E2 Play, Samsung denkt über Wechsel zu Bing nach, Digikam 8.0, Oppo Find X6 Pro ist bestes Kamera-Smartphone bei DxOMark, u.v.m., App der Woche: OwnCloud (Play Store und F-Droid)
This hour we dig into Apple's encryption plan, a new version of KdenLive is out, Tor Bundled for Ukraine, and a new open source platform connects those in need with resources in their area. -- During The Show -- 00:45 Dakota's Weather Roads are ice rinks 02:15 2 Questions: IR Remote & Waking From Sleep - Gary IR Remote $150 or less buy used Used URC 450 Remote RF Base Mouse/Keyboard Waking up computer Different levels of sleep Reach out to System76 08:05 Email Management? - Heath Filter email as it comes in 11:40 Managing Multiple Online Accounts - Brandon Podman run per client podman run -d --name=client1-browser --security-opt seccomp=unconfined `#optional` -e PUID=1000 -e PGID=1000 -p 3000:3000 -v /path/to/config:/config --shm-size="1gb" --restart unless-stopped lscr.io/linuxserver/firefox:latest Multi Account Containers (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/containers) Noah's System 20:26 Minetest Feedback - Heidi Mine Test Liberapay (https://liberapay.com/celeron55/) Mine Test Mastodon (https://fosstodon.org/@Minetest) 22:40 News Wire Open Source on the Rise Yahoo (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/finos-survey-87-financial-services-140000199.html) ChatGPT can Hallucinate ARS Technica (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2022/12/openais-new-chatbot-can-hallucinate-a-linux-shell-or-calling-a-bbs/) CIQ Hires 2 People PR Web (https://www.prweb.com/releases/ciq_expands_open_source_expertise_with_two_new_hires_as_a_part_of_continued_growth/prweb19068971.htm) CERN & Fermilab Adopt Alma Linux The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/12/08/cern_fermilab_almalinux/) Komodo IDE EOL but Released as Open Source Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/komodo-ide-open-source/) Homebrew Raises $9M for Tea Tech Crunch (https://techcrunch.com/2022/12/06/from-the-creator-of-homebrew-tea-raises-8-9m-to-build-a-protocol-that-helps-open-source-developers-get-paid/) New Crypto Jacking Malware Duo (https://duo.com/decipher/new-chaos-malware-targets-windows-and-linux-devices) New CXL Code submitted to Linux 6.2 Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/CXL-Linux-6.2) Unciv headed to Steam Gaming on Linux (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/12/unciv-the-open-source-remake-of-civilization-v-is-heading-to-steam/) Kali Linux 2022.4 Bleeping Computer (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/kali-linux-20224-adds-6-new-tools-azure-images-and-desktop-updates/) OpenShot 3.0 Open Shot (https://www.openshot.org/blog/2022/12/10/new_openshot_release_300/) Blender 3.4 Blender (https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Reference/Release_Notes/3.4) Digikam 7.9 Digikam (https://www.digikam.org/news/2022-12-05-7.9.0_release_announcement/) KDE Gear 22.12 KDE (https://kde.org/announcements/gear/22.12.0/) Tor Browser 12.0 Tor Project (https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-browser-120/) QT 6.5 David's Blog (https://blog.david-redondo.de/qt/kde/2022/12/09/wayland-native-interface.html) KaOS 2202.12 Linux IAC (https://linuxiac.com/kaos-2022-12/) Rocky Linux 9.1 Rocky Linux (https://rockylinux.org/news/rocky-linux-9-1-ga-release/) Linux 6.1 LTS Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/linux-kernel-6-1-release/) New System76 Launch Keyboard System76 (https://system76.com/accessories/launch_heavy_sa_1/configure) 26:10 St. Vincent de Paul Web Site (https://stdepaul.org/) Web site to help homeless people Entire site is FOSS Invites people to make changes Reddit Post (https://www.reddit.com/r/opensource/comments/zkn7fa/an_attempt_to_significantly_reduce_homelessness/) Actively looking for help 100% of donations go to those in need Do you have a FOSS project that helps people? 36:25 Kdenlive 22.12 Release Announcement (https://kdenlive.org/en/2022/12/kdenlive-22-12-released/) OMG Ubuntu Article (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/12/kdenlive-22-12-released) New Guide Marker System Remove white space feature Lots of other upgrades and features 43:14 Linux Libre 6.1 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/gnu-linux-libre-6-1-arrives-as-a-100-free-kernel-for-software-freedom-lovers) Completely "free" Linux Adjusts several drivers Deblobs several drivers Write in on why you use this 47:30 Tor Bundled for Ukraine Tor Project (https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-browser-120/) EFF Cover Your Tracks (https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/) The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/12/12/tor_browser_12_released/) Albanian and Ukrainian support Tor vs VPN 53:11 Apple Rolls Encryption for iCloud EFF (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/12/victory-apple-commits-encrypting-icloud-and-drops-phone-scanning-plans) Do you trust Apple? -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/316) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we've got some distro news with Salix Linux, Regata OS and Linux From Scratch. Then in App News we'll take a look at the latest releases of Blender, digiKam and more. Then later in the show, we've got some cool gaming news for you. All that and […]
Noah and Steve have recommended Z-Wave devices for home automation. What do you do when your home automation fails? What do you do when you suffer latency from streaming? Noah and Steve talk troubleshooting for your home network, and home automation. -- During The Show -- 02:20 Ordering System/Management? - Zack Hydra OMS Presta Shop (https://www.prestashop.com/en/1.7) 07:50 Caller Delmer Zwave network problems 30ish Devices Maybe an issue with the Zwave stick Try putting the Zwave Stick on an extension Garage Door Sensor Zwave Tilt Sensor Playing Media over the internet? Internet Routing Trace Route (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceroute) Ping Plotter (https://www.pingplotter.com/) 31:10 Securing Seafile? - Mathieu Threat Modeling SeaFile is designed to be on the internet SeaFile Encrypts/Decrypts Native Client - Locally Web Client - Cached for 1 hour server side OVH is in and subsidized by Canada Gov Consider something like Fail2Ban (https://www.fail2ban.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page) or CrowdSec (https://www.crowdsec.net/) Block Entire Countries (Russia, China, etc) Hosts.deny 38:40 Matrix bridging Cell Networks? - Mont Beeper (https://www.beeper.com/) JMP.chat (https://jmp.chat/) XMPP XMPP Matrix Bridge Aria-net (https://aria-net.org/SitePages/Portal/Bridges.aspx) You are not an admin of the room (can't rename) Initial sms doesn't come through right away 45:50 Linux News Wire CIQ Leadership Team The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/30/ubuntu_systemd_dns_update/) ZDnet (https://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-vets-unite-behind-ciq-rocky-linuxs-parent-company/) PR Web (https://www.prweb.com/releases/) Steam Linux Market Share Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Steam-Survey-August-2022) GitHub CI/CD Flaw Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/09/the-github-environment-injection-vulnerability-affects-two-open-source-projects/) Node.js Bug Hunting Security Week (https://www.securityweek.com/academics-devise-open-source-tool-hunting-nodejs-security-flaws) Rise in Linux Ransomware My Broadband (https://mybroadband.co.za/news/security/459251-ransomware-attacks-on-linux-up-75.html) Linux 6.1 & W=X Mappings Warnings Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.1-Warn-WX-Defconfig) Ubuntu Security Patch Breaks Azure The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/30/ubuntu_systemd_dns_update/) ELF Ransomware Encrypts Linux Files Security Affairs (https://securityaffairs.co/wordpress/135218/malware/linux-ransomware-under-development.html) OBS Studio 28 Github (https://github.com/obsproject/obs-studio/releases/tag/28.0.0) Budgie Desktop 10.6.4 Buddies of Budgie (https://blog.buddiesofbudgie.org/budgie-10-6-4-released/0) T2 22.9 T2 Project (http://www.t2sde.org/) Pipewire 0.3.57 GitLab (https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/tags/0.3.57) Digikam 7.8 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/digikam-7-8-open-source-digital-photo-manager-released-with-new-camera-support-more) Nitrux 2.4 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/nitrux-2-4-released-with-linux-kernel-5-19-kde-gear-22-08-and-new-maui-apps) Armbian 22.08 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/armbian-22-08-arrives-with-linux-5-19-wayland-by-default-for-kde-plasma-and-pikvm-support) Userver Open Sourced Open SSource For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/09/yandex-open-sources-userver-a-framework-for-building-high-load-apps/) Arch Linux 2022.09.03 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/first-arch-linux-iso-powered-by-linux-kernel-5-19-is-now-available-for-download) Salix 15 Beta News (https://betanews.com/2022/09/05/slackware-salix-15-linux-download/) Wine 7.16 Tech Spot (https://www.techspot.com/news/95871-wine-716-improves-windows-games-compatibility-linux.html) Ubuntu 20.04.5 LTS OMG Ubuntu (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/09/ubuntu-20-04-5-lts-released-with-linux-kernel-5-15) Ubuntu 22.10 Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Ubuntu-22.10-Linux-5.19) 49:10 Long Term Storage? - Charlie Long term DVDs/BluRays are not reliable Keep the data moving between devices Make 3 copies, store different mediums -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/302) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
What do you do when your container crashes your host? Steve is back and we walk through this and other questions! -- During The Show -- 03:20 Wireguard & Modems - Norm State Tables Image loading issue Next Steps Upgrade Modem Log into Modem Replace Modem 10:30 Emby, Docker & System Resources - Mike What a container is Name Spaces CGroups Use Systemd to launch containers Manually apply CGroup controls Steve's CGroups Write Up (https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/cgroups-part-one) Docker flags to limit Memory and/or CPU Usage: docker run -it --cpus="1.0" --memory="1g" 17:50 Linux and Backblaze - Keith BackBlaze B2 Protocol Dupicity Restic GPG Encrypt 20:00 IPFS to store academic papers? - BG IPFS Might work 23:30 Caller 1 Restaurant Point of Sale System Open Source POS.org (https://opensourcepos.org/) Squirrel POS (https://www.squirrelsystems.com/) Odoo POS (https://www.odoo.com/app/point-of-sale-shop) Odoo POS Hardware (https://www.odoo.com/app/point-of-sale-hardware) 27:50 Caller 2 Mesh Commander Mesh Central On Site Radios? MURS Radio Buy Two Way Radios (https://www.buytwowayradios.com/) Repeaters Element has a walkie talkie feature 36:00 Solution for single node container host? - Jeremy SystemD Swarm or Single Node OpenShift 38:00 Problems with new TLDs - Sunjam Spamassassin Blocks New Domains by Default (https://topicdesk.com/downloads/tutorials/spamassassin-filter-for-new-tlds-xyz-info-ninja-etc/) Steve hasn't had issues Most big companies don't care Make sure you have DKIM and SPF setup 44:00 News Wire AMD Publishes FSR 2.0 Under MIT License WCCF Tech (https://wccftech.com/amd-publishes-fsr-2-0-fidelityfx-super-resolution-technology-open-source-code/) Rust in Linux Kernel The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/23/linus_torvalds_rust_linux_kernel/) CBL Mariner 2.0 Live Patching and PXE Boot Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=CBL-Mariner-2.0-June-2022) KDE Plasma 5.25-1 Make Use Of (https://www.makeuseof.com/kde-plasma-5-25-1-released-with-bug-fixes/) Firefox 102 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/mozilla-firefox-102-is-now-available-for-download-adds-geoclue-support-on-linux) KaOS Linux 2022.06 Released 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/kaos-linux-2022-06-released-with-kde-plasma-5-25-desktop-and-calamares-3-3-installer) EndeavourOS Artemix Launches 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/endeavouros-artemis-launches-with-arm-installer-linux-5-18-and-latest-calamares) Pitivi 2022.06 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/pitivi-2022-06-open-source-video-editor-released-with-object-tracking-and-blurring) Xone Driver 0.3 Released Github (https://github.com/medusalix/xone/releases/tag/v0.3) Flameshot v12 Released GitHub (https://github.com/flameshot-org/flameshot/releases/tag/v12.0.0) GTK 2FA App "Authenticator" Tech Republic (https://www.techrepublic.com/article/linux-new-authenticator-app/) Digikam 7.7 Released Digikam (https://www.digikam.org/news/2022-06-26-7.7.0_release_announcement/) Peta Pixel (https://petapixel.com/2022/06/27/free-open-source-photo-manager-digikam-gets-a-big-update/) Github Co-Pilot changes liscense (No Longer Free) Infoq (https://www.infoq.com/news/2022/06/GitHub-copilot-ga/) GoFundMe To Fight Government Contractor Copying and Copyrighting Open Source 3D Printer Tech Drit (https://www.techdirt.com/2022/06/24/ridiculous-govt-contractor-copies-open-source-3d-printing-concept-and-patents-it/) 47:05 Pick of the Week Firezone (https://www.firezone.dev/) "Run Anywhere" Firewall and VPN Server Based on Wireguard Stable, Performant, Lightweight NAT Gateway Static IP -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/292) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
In our second of two parts on editing and managing photos on Linux we describe a few additional applications for you to try. We share what they do but the trying is up to you! We also reveal what we are doing for our 400th episode. Episode 398 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #398 · Edit and manage photos on Linux Pt. 2 01:30 Microsoft is driving Bill insane with forced updates 06:48 Forced install of Edge browser 08:30 Our 400th show! 09:58 Editing and managing photos on Linu part 2 11:15 Shotwell 12:14 Pix 12:58 Gwenview 13:38 Digikam 15:40 Darktable 16:40 Entangle 19:29 Try different applications for yourself 20:01 Gimp, Glimpse, Eye of MATE, gThumb, RawTherapee, Showfoto, KPhotoAlbum, LXImage 23:09 What's in store for our 400th show? It's all about you! 24:39 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 25:55 End
In our second of two parts on editing and managing photos on Linux we describe a few additional applications for you to try. We share what they do but the trying is up to you! We also reveal what we are doing for our 400th episode. Episode 398 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #398 · Edit and manage photos on Linux Pt. 2 01:30 Microsoft is driving Bill insane with forced updates 06:48 Forced install of Edge browser 08:30 Our 400th show! 09:58 Editing and managing photos on Linu part 2 11:15 Shotwell 12:14 Pix 12:58 Gwenview 13:38 Digikam 15:40 Darktable 16:40 Entangle 19:29 Try different applications for yourself 20:01 Gimp, Glimpse, Eye of MATE, gThumb, RawTherapee, Showfoto, KPhotoAlbum, LXImage 23:09 What's in store for our 400th show? It's all about you! 24:39 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 25:55 End
On this weeks episode of DLN Xtend we talk about taking the perfect picture and the software you can use to do it with on Linux. Welcome to episode 31 of DLN Xtend. DLN Xtend is a community powered podcast. We take conversations from the DLN Community from places like the DLN Discourse Forums, Telegram group, Discord server and more. We also take topics from other shows around the network to give our takes. 00:00 Introduction 14:12 Linux Photography Software 44:36 Host Related Interest 56:05 Wrap Up Photo Software Links Rapid Photo Downloader (https://www.damonlynch.net/rapid/) - photo/video download software - name images/video - set folder structor * Darktable (https://www.darktable.org/) - raw editing - photo managment * RawTharapee (https://rawtherapee.com/) - raw editing * LightZone (https://lightzoneproject.org/) - raw editing * Shotwell (https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Shotwell) - photo managment - basic editing * digiKam (https://www.digikam.org/) - photo managment - basic editing * PhotoFlow (https://photoflowblog.blogspot.com/) * Fotoxx (https://www.kornelix.net/fotoxx/fotoxx.html) Host Related Interest: Matt Resident Evil 6- https://store.steampowered.com/app/221040/ResidentEvil6/ Wendy- Nvidia GPU Launch Join us in the DLN Community: Discourse: https://discourse.destinationlinux.network/ Telegram: https://destinationlinux.org/telegram Mumble: https://destinationlinux.network/mumble/ Discord: https://destinationlinux.org/discord servers to continue the discussion! Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattDLN) Wendy (https://dlnxtend.com/wendy) (Instagram @LinuxandLifts) Nate (cubiclenate.com)
Want to know what applications are available on Linux for managing, viewing, modifying, and organizing photos? We talk about a few of them on this, the first of at least two parts. Episode 396 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #396 · Edit and manage photos on Linux Pt. 1 00:59 Bill is still using Manjaro 01:47 Problem with PDFs 04:49 The world of photography 07:43 Linux applications for viewing, modifying, and organizing photos 08:18 Getting photos into your computer 09:24 Viewing and organizing photos in Linux 09:39 Shotwell 10:30 Digikam 12:46 gThumb 14:25 Piwigo 20:35 gwenview 22:03 Gnome photos 25:09 Definition of terms 28:03 Applications for editing photos on Linux 28:17 Rawtherapee 33:13 Darktable 40:49 More terms 42:58 fotoxx 48:08 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 49:14 End
Want to know what applications are available on Linux for managing, viewing, modifying, and organizing photos? We talk about a few of them on this, the first of at least two parts. Episode 396 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #396 · Edit and manage photos on Linux Pt. 1 00:59 Bill is still using Manjaro 01:47 Problem with PDFs 04:49 The world of photography 07:43 Linux applications for viewing, modifying, and organizing photos 08:18 Getting photos into your computer 09:24 Viewing and organizing photos in Linux 09:39 Shotwell 10:30 Digikam 12:46 gThumb 14:25 Piwigo 20:35 gwenview 22:03 Gnome photos 25:09 Definition of terms 28:03 Applications for editing photos on Linux 28:17 Rawtherapee 33:13 Darktable 40:49 More terms 42:58 fotoxx 48:08 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 49:14 End
This week we’ve been going retro; making an Ubuntu Retro Remix and playing ET:Legacy. We discuss the new release of digiKam, Intel GPU driver tweaks, Ubuntu Web Remix, Thunderbird 78 and Mir 2.0! We also round up our picks from… Read more ›
This Week in Linux is a Proud Member of the Destination Linux Network! https://destinationlinux.network On this episode of This Week in Linux, we've got some really cool hardware news, we've finally got some Linux laptops equipped with an AMD Ryzen 4000H series processor. These laptops are thanks to Tuxedo Computers and KDE Slimbook. Cooler Master has launched a kickstarter campaign to make a pretty slick Case for the Raspberry Pi 4. We've also got a LOT of App News this week with the latest release of the most popular open source email client, Thunderbird 78 from Mozilla. KDE has released version 7.0.0 of digiKam. If you've been wanting an open source way to control your RGB lights on your devices then OpenRGB may be the tool for you. And finally, PeerTube has announced the 2.3.0 release that comes with the much anticipated Global Search feature! All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! Sponsored by: Digital Ocean - https://do.co/dln Bitwarden - https://bitwarden.com/dln Become a Patron: - https://tuxdigital.com/patreon - https://tuxdigital.com/sponsus - https://tuxdigital.com/contribute Other Links: - https://destinationlinux.network/store - https://frontpagelinux.com - https://michaeltunnell.com Segment Index: Show Notes - https://tuxdigital.com/twinl110 00:00 Intro 01:01 What is This Week in Linux 01:41 Linux Laptops with AMD Ryzen 4000H - KDE Slimbook and Tuxedo Pulse 15 12:10 Cooler Master Case for Raspberry Pi 4 21:48 Mozilla Thunderbird 78 Released 29:13 digiKam 7.0.0 Released 32:41 Become a Patron of TuxDigital & TWinL 34:10 FrontPageLinux.com 35:55 OpenRGB - Open Source RGB Control 40:12 PeerTube 2.3.0 Released (with Global Search) 42:43 Outro Linux #OpenSource #GNews
Calls for political activism in software projects continue to ramp up, digiKam 7 arrives with enhanced facial recognition, Zulip unleashes its biggest release ever amid tensions between its competitors, and a new 'zine focusing on Fedora seeks contributors.
On this episode of Destination Linux, we discuss the latest releases from Ubuntu, Kali Linux, Riot.IM, digiKam, Vulkan and more. Google backtracks on their adblocking fiasco, at least for now. The battles between AMD and NVidia is heating up with AMD hiring 10 more Open Source Developers and NVidia announces the GTX 1660. All that […]
On this episode of This Week in Linux, an Arbitrary Code Execution vulnerability was found in the Linux Kernel but it is not quite what some sources are making it out to be. Rumors are going around for Ubuntu and Snaps but again it’s not what people are making it out to be. Then we’ll… Read more
Will there ever be another "big" Linux distro, or has that time passed? Plus two popular Linux desktop apps see a big upgrade, and Wes explains to Chris why he should care a lot more about cgroups. Special Guests: Brent Gervais and Neal Gompa.
What ZFS blockpointers are, zero-day rewards offered, KDE on FreeBSD status, new FreeBSD core team, NetBSD WiFi refresh, poor man’s CI, and the power of Ctrl+T. ##Headlines What ZFS block pointers are and what’s in them I’ve mentioned ZFS block pointers in the past; for example, when I wrote about some details of ZFS DVAs, I said that DVAs are embedded in block pointers. But I’ve never really looked carefully at what is in block pointers and what that means and implies for ZFS. The very simple way to describe a ZFS block pointer is that it’s what ZFS uses in places where other filesystems would simply put a block number. Just like block numbers but unlike things like ZFS dnodes, a block pointer isn’t a separate on-disk entity; instead it’s an on disk data format and an in memory structure that shows up in other things. To quote from the (draft and old) ZFS on-disk specification (PDF): A block pointer (blkptr_t) is a 128 byte ZFS structure used to physically locate, verify, and describe blocks of data on disk. Block pointers are embedded in any ZFS on disk structure that points directly to other disk blocks, both for data and metadata. For instance, the dnode for a file contains block pointers that refer to either its data blocks (if it’s small enough) or indirect blocks, as I saw in this entry. However, as I discovered when I paid attention, most things in ZFS only point to dnodes indirectly, by giving their object number (either in a ZFS filesystem or in pool-wide metadata). So what’s in a block pointer itself? You can find the technical details for modern ZFS in spa.h, so I’m going to give a sort of summary. A regular block pointer contains: various metadata and flags about what the block pointer is for and what parts of it mean, including what type of object it points to. Up to three DVAs that say where to actually find the data on disk. There can be more than one DVA because you may have set the copies property to 2 or 3, or this may be metadata (which normally has two copies and may have more for sufficiently important metadata). The logical size (size before compression) and ‘physical’ size (the nominal size after compression) of the disk block. The physical size can do odd things and is not necessarily the asize (allocated size) for the DVA(s). The txgs that the block was born in, both logically and physically (the physical txg is apparently for dva[0]). The physical txg was added with ZFS deduplication but apparently also shows up in vdev removal. The checksum of the data the block pointer describes. This checksum implicitly covers the entire logical size of the data, and as a result you must read all of the data in order to verify it. This can be an issue on raidz vdevs or if the block had to use gang blocks. Just like basically everything else in ZFS, block pointers don’t have an explicit checksum of their contents. Instead they’re implicitly covered by the checksum of whatever they’re embedded in; the block pointers in a dnode are covered by the overall checksum of the dnode, for example. Block pointers must include a checksum for the data they point to because such data is ‘out of line’ for the containing object. (The block pointers in a dnode don’t necessarily point straight to data. If there’s more than a bit of data in whatever the dnode covers, the dnode’s block pointers will instead point to some level of indirect block, which itself has some number of block pointers.) There is a special type of block pointer called an embedded block pointer. Embedded block pointers directly contain up to 112 bytes of data; apart from the data, they contain only the metadata fields and a logical birth txg. As with conventional block pointers, this data is implicitly covered by the checksum of the containing object. Since block pointers directly contain the address of things on disk (in the form of DVAs), they have to change any time that address changes, which means any time ZFS does its copy on write thing. This forces a change in whatever contains the block pointer, which in turn ripples up to another block pointer (whatever points to said containing thing), and so on until we eventually reach the Meta Object Set and the uberblock. How this works is a bit complicated, but ZFS is designed to generally make this a relatively shallow change with not many levels of things involved (as I discovered recently). As far as I understand things, the logical birth txg of a block pointer is the transaction group in which the block pointer was allocated. Because of ZFS’s copy on write principle, this means that nothing underneath the block pointer has been updated or changed since that txg; if something changed, it would have been written to a new place on disk, which would have forced a change in at least one DVA and thus a ripple of updates that would update the logical birth txg. However, this doesn’t quite mean what I used to think it meant because of ZFS’s level of indirection. If you change a file by writing data to it, you will change some of the file’s block pointers, updating their logical birth txg, and you will change the file’s dnode. However, you won’t change any block pointers and thus any logical birth txgs for the filesystem directory the file is in (or anything else up the directory tree), because the directory refers to the file through its object number, not by directly pointing to its dnode. You can still use logical birth txgs to efficiently find changes from one txg to another, but you won’t necessarily get a filesystem level view of these changes; instead, as far as I can see, you will basically get a view of what object(s) in a filesystem changed (effectively, what inode numbers changed). (ZFS has an interesting hack to make things like ‘zfs diff’ work far more efficiently than you would expect in light of this, but that’s going to take yet another entry to cover.) ###Rewards of Up to $500,000 Offered for FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, Linux Zero-Days Exploit broker Zerodium is offering rewards of up to $500,000 for zero-days in UNIX-based operating systems like OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, but also for Linux distros such as Ubuntu, CentOS, Debian, and Tails. The offer, first advertised via Twitter earlier this week, is available as part of the company’s latest zero-day acquisition drive. Zerodium is known for buying zero-days and selling them to government agencies and law enforcement. The company runs a regular zero-day acquisition program through its website, but it often holds special drives with more substantial rewards when it needs zero-days of a specific category. BSD zero-day rewards will be on par with Linux payouts The US-based company held a previous drive with increased rewards for Linux zero-days in February, with rewards going as high as $45,000. In another zero-day acquisition drive announced on Twitter this week, the company said it was looking again for Linux zero-days, but also for exploits targeting BSD systems. This time around, rewards can go up to $500,000, for the right exploit. Zerodium told Bleeping Computer they’ll be aligning the temporary rewards for BSD systems with their usual payouts for Linux distros. The company’s usual payouts for Linux privilege escalation exploits can range from $10,000 to $30,000. Local privilege escalation (LPE) rewards can even reach $100,000 for “an exploit with an exceptional quality and coverage,” such as, for example, a Linux kernel exploit affecting all major distributions. Payouts for Linux remote code execution (RCE) exploits can bring in from $50,000 to $500,000 depending on the targeted software/service and its market share. The highest rewards are usually awarded for LPEs and RCEs affecting CentOS and Ubuntu distros. Zero-day price varies based on exploitation chain The acquisition price of a submitted zero-day is directly tied to its requirements in terms of user interaction (no click, one click, two clicks, etc.), Zerodium said. Other factors include the exploit reliability, its success rate, the number of vulnerabilities chained together for the final exploit to work (more chained bugs means more chances for the exploit to break unexpectedly), and the OS configuration needed for the exploit to work (exploits are valued more if they work against default OS configs). Zero-days in servers “can reach exceptional amounts” “Price difference between systems is mostly driven by market shares,” Zerodium founder Chaouki Bekrar told Bleeping Computer via email. Asked about the logic behind these acquisition drives that pay increased rewards, Bekrar told Bleeping Computer the following: "Our aim is to always have, at any time, two or more fully functional exploits for every major software, hardware, or operating systems, meaning that from time to time we would promote a specific software/system on our social media to acquire new codes and strengthen our existing capabilities or extend them.” “We may also react to customers’ requests and their operational needs,” Bekrar said. It’s becoming a crowded market Since Zerodium drew everyone’s attention to the exploit brokerage market in 2015, the market has gotten more and more crowded, but also more sleazy, with some companies being accused of selling zero-days to government agencies in countries with oppressive or dictatorial regimes, where they are often used against political oponents, journalists, and dissidents, instead of going after real criminals. The latest company who broke into the zero-day brokerage market is Crowdfense, who recently launched an acquisition program with prizes of $10 million, of which it already paid $4.5 million to researchers. Twitter Announcement Digital Ocean http://do.co/bsdnow ###KDE on FreeBSD – June 2018 The KDE-FreeBSD team (a half-dozen hardy individuals, with varying backgrounds and varying degrees of involvement depending on how employment is doing) has a status message in the #kde-freebsd channel on freenode. Right now it looks like this: http://FreeBSD.kde.org | Bleeding edge http://FreeBSD.kde.org/area51.php | Released: Qt 5.10.1, KDE SC 4.14.3, KF5 5.46.0, Applications 18.04.1, Plasma-5.12.5, Kdevelop-5.2.1, Digikam-5.9.0 It’s been a while since I wrote about KDE on FreeBSD, what with Calamares and third-party software happening as well. We’re better at keeping the IRC topic up-to-date than a lot of other sources of information (e.g. the FreeBSD quarterly reports, or the f.k.o website, which I’ll just dash off and update after writing this). In no particular order: Qt 5.10 is here, in a FrankenEngine incarnation: we still use WebEnging from Qt 5.9 because — like I’ve said before — WebEngine is such a gigantic pain in the butt to update with all the necessary patches to get it to compile. Our collection of downstream patches to Qt 5.10 is growing, slowly. None of them are upstreamable (e.g. libressl support) though. KDE Frameworks releases are generally pushed to ports within a week or two of release. Actually, now that there is a bigger stack of KDE software in FreeBSD ports the updates take longer because we have to do exp-runs. Similarly, Applications and Plasma releases are reasonably up-to-date. We dodged a bullet by not jumping on Plasma 5.13 right away, I see. Tobias is the person doing almost all of the drudge-work of these updates, he deserves a pint of something in Vienna this summer. The freebsd.kde.org website has been slightly updated; it was terribly out-of-date. So we’re mostly-up-to-date, and mostly all packaged up and ready to go. Much of my day is spent in VMs packaged by other people, but it’s good to have a full KDE developer environment outside of them as well. (PS. Gotta hand it to Tomasz for the amazing application for downloading and displaying a flamingo … niche usecases FTW) ##News Roundup New FreeBSD Core Team Elected Active committers to the project have elected your tenth FreeBSD Core Team. Allan Jude (allanjude) Benedict Reuschling (bcr) Brooks Davis (brooks) Hiroki Sato (hrs) Jeff Roberson (jeff) John Baldwin (jhb) Kris Moore (kmoore) Sean Chittenden (seanc) Warner Losh (imp) Let’s extend our gratitude to the outgoing Core Team members: Baptiste Daroussin (bapt) Benno Rice (benno) Ed Maste (emaste) George V. Neville-Neil (gnn) Matthew Seaman (matthew) Matthew, after having served as the Core Team Secretary for the past four years, will be stepping down from that role. The Core Team would also like to thank Dag-Erling Smørgrav for running a flawless election. To read about the responsibilities of the Core Team, refer to https://www.freebsd.org/administration.html#t-core. ###NetBSD WiFi refresh The NetBSD Foundation is pleased to announce a summer 2018 contract with Philip Nelson (phil%NetBSD.org@localhost) to update the IEEE 802.11 stack basing the update on the FreeBSD current code. The goals of the project are: Minimizing the differences between the FreeBSD and NetBSD IEEE 802.11 stack so future updates are easier. Adding support for the newer protocols 801.11/N and 802.11/AC. Improving SMP support in the IEEE 802.11 stack. Adding Virtual Access Point (VAP) support. Updating as many NIC drivers as time permits for the updated IEEE 802.11 stack and VAP changes. Status reports will be posted to tech-net%NetBSD.org@localhost every other week while the contract is active. iXsystems ###Poor Man’s CI - Hosted CI for BSD with shell scripting and duct tape Poor Man’s CI (PMCI - Poor Man’s Continuous Integration) is a collection of scripts that taken together work as a simple CI solution that runs on Google Cloud. While there are many advanced hosted CI systems today, and many of them are free for open source projects, none of them seem to offer a solution for the BSD operating systems (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, etc.) The architecture of Poor Man’s CI is system agnostic. However in the implementation provided in this repository the only supported systems are FreeBSD and NetBSD. Support for additional systems is possible. Poor Man’s CI runs on the Google Cloud. It is possible to set it up so that the service fits within the Google Cloud “Always Free” limits. In doing so the provided CI is not only hosted, but is also free! (Disclaimer: I am not affiliated with Google and do not otherwise endorse their products.) ARCHITECTURE A CI solution listens for “commit” (or more usually “push”) events, builds the associated repository at the appropriate place in its history and reports the results. Poor Man’s CI implements this very basic CI scenario using a simple architecture, which we present in this section. Poor Man’s CI consists of the following components and their interactions: Controller: Controls the overall process of accepting GitHub push events and starting builds. The Controller runs in the Cloud Functions environment and is implemented by the files in the controller source directory. It consists of the following components: Listener: Listens for GitHub push events and posts them as work messages to the workq PubSub. Dispatcher: Receives work messages from the workq PubSub and a free instance name from the Builder Pool. It instantiates a builder instance named name in the Compute Engine environment and passes it the link of a repository to build. Collector: Receives done messages from the doneq PubSub and posts the freed instance name back to the Builder Pool. PubSub Topics: workq: Transports work messages that contain the link of the repository to build. poolq: Implements the Builder Pool, which contains the name’s of available builder instances. To acquire a builder name, pull a message from the poolq. To release a builder name, post it back into the poolq. doneq: Transports done messages (builder instance terminate and delete events). These message contain the name of freed builder instances. builder: A builder is a Compute Engine instance that performs a build of a repository and shuts down when the build is complete. A builder is instantiated from a VM image and a startx (startup-exit) script. Build Logs: A Storage bucket that contains the logs of builds performed by builder instances. Logging Sink: A Logging Sink captures builder instance terminate and delete events and posts them into the doneq. BUGS The Builder Pool is currently implemented as a PubSub; messages in the PubSub contain the names of available builder instances. Unfortunately a PubSub retains its messages for a maximum of 7 days. It is therefore possible that messages will be discarded and that your PMCI deployment will suddenly find itself out of builder instances. If this happens you can reseed the Builder Pool by running the commands below. However this is a serious BUG that should be fixed. For a related discussion see https://tinyurl.com/ybkycuub. $ ./pmci queuepost poolq builder0 # ./pmci queuepost poolq builder1 # ... repeat for as many builders as you want The Dispatcher is implemented as a Retry Background Cloud Function. It accepts work messages from the workq and attempts to pull a free name from the poolq. If that fails it returns an error, which instructs the infrastructure to retry. Because the infrastructure does not provide any retry controls, this currently happens immediately and the Dispatcher spins unproductively. This is currently mitigated by a “sleep” (setTimeout), but the Cloud Functions system still counts the Function as running and charges it accordingly. While this fits within the “Always Free” limits, it is something that should eventually be fixed (perhaps by the PubSub team). For a related discussion see https://tinyurl.com/yb2vbwfd. ###The Power of Ctrl-T Did you know that you can check what a process is doing by pressing CTRL+T? Has it happened to you before that you were waiting for something to be finished that can take a lot of time, but there is no easy way to check the status. Like a dd, cp, mv and many others. All you have to do is press CTRL+T where the process is running. This will output what’s happening and will not interrupt or mess with it in any way. This causes the operating system to output the SIGINFO signal. On FreeBSD it looks like this: ping pingtest.com PING pingtest.com (5.22.149.135): 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=0 ttl=51 time=86.232 ms 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=1 ttl=51 time=85.477 ms 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=2 ttl=51 time=85.493 ms 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=3 ttl=51 time=85.211 ms 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=4 ttl=51 time=86.002 ms load: 1.12 cmd: ping 94371 [select] 4.70r 0.00u 0.00s 0% 2500k 5/5 packets received (100.0%) 85.211 min / 85.683 avg / 86.232 max 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmpseq=5 ttl=51 time=85.725 ms 64 bytes from 5.22.149.135: icmp_seq=6 ttl=51 time=85.510 ms As you can see it not only outputs the name of the running command but the following parameters as well: 94371 – PID 4.70r – since when is the process running 0.00u – user time 0.00s – system time 0% – CPU usage 2500k – resident set size of the process or RSS `` > An even better example is with the following cp command: cp FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso /dev/null load: 0.99 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 1.61r 0.00u 0.39s 3% 3100k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 15% load: 0.91 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 2.91r 0.00u 0.80s 6% 3104k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 32% load: 0.91 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 4.20r 0.00u 1.23s 9% 3104k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 49% load: 0.91 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 5.43r 0.00u 1.64s 11% 3104k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 64% load: 1.07 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 6.65r 0.00u 2.05s 13% 3104k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 79% load: 1.07 cmd: cp 94412 [runnable] 7.87r 0.00u 2.43s 15% 3104k FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -> /dev/null 95% > I prcessed CTRL+T six times. Without that, all the output would have been is the first line. > Another example how the process is changing states: wget https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/releases/amd64/amd64/ISO-IMAGES/11.1/FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso –2018-06-17 18:47:48– https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/releases/amd64/amd64/ISO-IMAGES/11.1/FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso Resolving download.freebsd.org (download.freebsd.org)… 96.47.72.72, 2610:1c1:1:606c::15:0 Connecting to download.freebsd.org (download.freebsd.org)|96.47.72.72|:443… connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response… 200 OK Length: 3348465664 (3.1G) [application/octet-stream] Saving to: ‘FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso’ FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso 1%[> ] 41.04M 527KB/s eta 26m 49sload: 4.95 cmd: wget 10152 waiting 0.48u 0.72s FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso 1%[> ] 49.41M 659KB/s eta 25m 29sload: 12.64 cmd: wget 10152 waiting 0.55u 0.85s FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso 2%[=> ] 75.58M 6.31MB/s eta 20m 6s load: 11.71 cmd: wget 10152 running 0.73u 1.19s FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso 2%[=> ] 85.63M 6.83MB/s eta 18m 58sload: 11.71 cmd: wget 10152 waiting 0.80u 1.32s FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso 14%[==============> ] 460.23M 7.01MB/s eta 9m 0s 1 > The bad news is that CTRl+T doesn’t work with Linux kernel, but you can use it on MacOS/OS-X: —> Fetching distfiles for gmp —> Attempting to fetch gmp-6.1.2.tar.bz2 from https://distfiles.macports.org/gmp —> Verifying checksums for gmp —> Extracting gmp —> Applying patches to gmp —> Configuring gmp load: 2.81 cmd: clang 74287 running 0.31u 0.28s > PS: If I recall correctly Feld showed me CTRL+T, thank you! Beastie Bits Half billion tries for a HAMMER2 bug (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2018-May/672263.html) OpenBSD with various Desktops OpenBSD 6.3 running twm window manager (https://youtu.be/v6XeC5wU2s4) OpenBSD 6.3 jwm and rox desktop (https://youtu.be/jlSK2oi7CBc) OpenBSD 6.3 cwm youtube video (https://youtu.be/mgqNyrP2CPs) pf: Increase default state table size (https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=336221) *** Tarsnap Feedback/Questions Ben Sims - Full feed? (http://dpaste.com/3XVH91T#wrap) Scott - Questions and Comments (http://dpaste.com/08P34YN#wrap) Troels - Features of FreeBSD 11.2 that deserve a mention (http://dpaste.com/3DDPEC2#wrap) Fred - Show Ideas (http://dpaste.com/296ZA0P#wrap) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) iXsystems It's all NAS (https://www.ixsystems.com/blog/its-all-nas/)
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