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This week's Chit Chat Across the Pond is an episode of Taming the Terminal, where Bart winds up our series within a series all about the Terminal command TMUX. In this final piece he teaches us first how to string commands together to create the TMUX sessions we want with the screens split and the processes running in each pane as we like them. After teaching us how to string them together he shows us how to make a little script file we can run so that we can automatically open up our TMUX sessions exactly the way we like them. This will be the last of our Taming the Terminal episodes for a while, but we'll be back after macOS Big Sur ships and is stabilized. In macOS Catalina the default shell was changed from bash to zsh and it does bring some changes to things we learned earlier in the series but it seems prudent to wait till we're over this big hump getting into Big Sur. You can find Bart's tutorial shownotes over at ttt.bartificer.net/... Don't forget, you can download the Taming the Terminal book at podfeet.com/tttbook. The book will be updated with this instalment shortly.
This week's Chit Chat Across the Pond is an episode of Taming the Terminal, where Bart winds up our series within a series all about the Terminal command TMUX. In this final piece he teaches us first how to string commands together to create the TMUX sessions we want with the screens split and the processes running in each pane as we like them. After teaching us how to string them together he shows us how to make a little script file we can run so that we can automatically open up our TMUX sessions exactly the way we like them. This will be the last of our Taming the Terminal episodes for a while, but we'll be back after macOS Big Sur ships and is stabilized. In macOS Catalina the default shell was changed from bash to zsh and it does bring some changes to things we learned earlier in the series but it seems prudent to wait till we're over this big hump getting into Big Sur. You can find Bart's tutorial shownotes over at ttt.bartificer.net/... Don't forget, you can download the Taming the Terminal book at podfeet.com/tttbook. The book will be updated with this instalment shortly.
In this episode of Taming the Terminal, Bart winds up our series within a series all about the Terminal command TMUX. In this final piece he teaches us first how to string commands together to create the TMUX sessions we want with the screens split and the processes running in each pane as we like them. After teaching us how to string them together he shows us how to make a little script file we can run so that we can automatically open up our TMUX sessions exactly the way we like them. This will be the last of our Taming the Terminal episodes for a while, but we'll be back after macOS Big Sur ships and is stabilized. In macOS Catalina the default shell was changed from bash to zsh and it does bring some changes to things we learned earlier in the series but it seems prudent to wait till we're over this big hump getting into Big Sur. You can find Bart's tutorial shownotes over at ttt.bartificer.net/... Don't forget, you can download the Taming the Terminal book at podfeet.com/tttbook. The book will be updated with this instalment shortly.
"Waiting for the worms to come." -- Pink Floyd and RDP's CVE-2019-0708. Even the NSA warns about the population of exposed systems, A patch commands attention for mail servers, In macOS Catalina and iOS 13, Apples finds a way to find devices and not lose privacy, iOS App Transport Security has strong benefits, but weak adoption, and much more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode64 Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly
This week, we welcome Tanya Janca, also known as SheHacksPurple, a senior cloud advocate for Microsoft, specializing in application, cloud security, and more! Tanya is joining us on the show to talk about DevSecOps and Securing Software Supply Chains! In the Application Security News, "Waiting for the worms to come." -- Pink Floyd and RDP's CVE-2019-0708. Even the NSA warns about the population of exposed systems, A patch commands attention for mail servers, In macOS Catalina and iOS 13, Apples finds a way to find devices and not lose privacy, iOS App Transport Security has strong benefits, but weak adoption, and much more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode64 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
"Waiting for the worms to come." -- Pink Floyd and RDP's CVE-2019-0708. Even the NSA warns about the population of exposed systems, A patch commands attention for mail servers, In macOS Catalina and iOS 13, Apples finds a way to find devices and not lose privacy, iOS App Transport Security has strong benefits, but weak adoption, and much more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode64 Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly
This week, we welcome Tanya Janca, also known as SheHacksPurple, a senior cloud advocate for Microsoft, specializing in application, cloud security, and more! Tanya is joining us on the show to talk about DevSecOps and Securing Software Supply Chains! In the Application Security News, "Waiting for the worms to come." -- Pink Floyd and RDP's CVE-2019-0708. Even the NSA warns about the population of exposed systems, A patch commands attention for mail servers, In macOS Catalina and iOS 13, Apples finds a way to find devices and not lose privacy, iOS App Transport Security has strong benefits, but weak adoption, and much more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode64 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly