Vector graphics editor
POPULARITY
Graphite is a new image editor with an interesting architecture - it's a classic UI-driven app, an image-manipulation language, and a library of programmable graphics primitives that any Rust coder could use, extend or add to. The result is something that you can use like Photoshop or Inkscape, or make use of in batch pipelines, a bit like ImageMagick.Joining me to discuss it are Keavon Chambers & Dennis Kobert, who are hammering away on building a project that's potentially as demanding as Photoshop, but with a more ambitious architecture. How can they hope to compete? Perhaps in the short term by doing what regular image And is the future of image editing modular?–Graphite Homepage: https://graphite.rs/Graphite Web Version: https://editor.graphite.rs/Graphite on Github: https://github.com/GraphiteEditor/GraphiteSigned Distance Fields: https://jasmcole.com/2019/10/03/signed-distance-fields/Support Developer Voices on Patreon: https://patreon.com/DeveloperVoicesSupport Developer Voices on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@developervoices/joinKris on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/krisajenkins.bsky.socialKris on Mastodon: http://mastodon.social/@krisajenkinsKris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/krisjenkins/
Check out the new Going Linux website design and the new articles! Bill goes Big Linux and has been having issues with Ubuntu based distros. We discuss snap vs flatpack. Sean rambles, makes software recommendations, and wants your opinion on Enlightenment. Gabe asks about device drivers for Linux JackDeth has weather recommendations, details a powerful computer and recommends RustDesk over Team viewer. George From Tulsa tiscusses laptop battery life and virtual machines on macOS. Reid provides an update on the Lemur Pro and Jim like's the new music. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux 462 · Listener Feedback 00:28 Larry uses the wrong microphone 03:21 Larry redesigns the Going Linux website 06:16 Bill plays with Big Linux 07:26 Bill has been having issues with Ubuntu based distributions 09:18 Larry switches to the correct mic 10:40 Linux Mint ran without issues. Is it Snap vs. Flatpack? 14:46 SCALE 22x announcement 17:29 Sean: Ramblings and software recommendations 20:17 Software Freedom Day 23:43 YT-DLP 25:30 Gramps 26:20 Open source astronomy software 27:13 Inkscape and Sodipodi 27:34 AnsiWeather 29:09 Sean: Send in your opinions on Enlightenment 31:07 Stellarium 40:47 Gabe: Linux device drivers 51:26 JackDeth: Recommendations for Sean on weather apps 54:11 JackDeth: Dell Optiplex Linux load out 62:03 RustDesk vs. Team Viewer 66:28 George: Laptop battery life 72:26 George: UTM Virtual machine 74:47 Reid: An update on the Lemur Pro 81:22 Jim: I like the music 84:01 End
Les références : Campagne de l'April Le Lama Déchaîné Bloc-notes principal de préparation de la campagne Salon de visioconférence pour les réunions de préparation de la campagne chaque lundi matin à 9 h Liste de discussion Sensibilisation de l'April. L'inscription et les archives sont publiques Linuxfr.org, site francophone communautaire traitant de l'actualité informatique liée le plus souvent au logiciel libre En vente libre, plateforme de vente en ligne de goodies d'associations promouvant le logiciel libre et de collecte de dons Inkscape, logiciel libre de création vectorielle Générateur de BD sur Chapril.org Liste de discussion autour des logiciels libres de caisse. L'inscription et les archives sont publiques La chronique À la rencontre du libre de Julie Chaumard Chapril, les services en ligne libres et loyaux proposés par l'April Qui a hacké Garoutzia ?, du 24 septembre au 31 décembre 2024 à la Scène Parisienne Connaissez-vous vraiment Internet ? Protocoles, sécurité, censure, gouvernance, éditions Eyrolles, 2022Vous pouvez mettre un commentaire pour l'épisode. Et même mettre une note sur 5 étoiles si vous le souhaitez. Et même mettre une note sur 5 étoiles si vous le souhaitez. Il est important pour nous d'avoir vos retours car, contrairement par exemple à une conférence, nous n'avons pas un public en face de nous qui peut réagir. Pour mettre un commentaire ou une note, rendez-vous sur la page dédiée à l'épisode.Aidez-nous à mieux vous connaître et améliorer l'émission en répondant à notre questionnaire (en cinq minutes). Vos réponses à ce questionnaire sont très précieuses pour nous. De votre côté, ce questionnaire est une occasion de nous faire des retours. Pour connaître les nouvelles concernant l'émission (annonce des podcasts, des émissions à venir, ainsi que des bonus et des annonces en avant-première) inscrivez-vous à la lettre d'actus.
Tracy Homer discusses the intersection of open-source mapping and art in her presentation, showcasing various artistic map projects she has completed using open-source tools and technologies. Highlights
video: https://youtu.be/RbRO0083v0Q Forum Discussion Thread (https://forum.tuxdigital.com/t/282-ubuntu-flavours-android-running-linux-apps-inkscape-rocky-linux-from-ciq-more-linux-news/6468) This week in Linux, we're going to talk about the 24.10 release of all of the Ubuntu Flavours. Google seems to be doing some work to get Linux apps to work on Android devices. Asahi Linux is doing some great work with getting Linux support on Apple Silicon even Gaming on Linux on Macs. We also have a brand new release from the really cool vector graphics program, Inkscape. All of this and more on This Week in Linux, the weekly news show that keeps you up to date with what's going on in the Linux and Open Source world. Now let's jump right into Your Source for Linux GNews! Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/393b3fc5-b2df-4e6c-8188-6d5aad150151.mp3) Support the Show Become a Patron = tuxdigital.com/membership (https://tuxdigital.com/membership) Store = tuxdigital.com/store (https://tuxdigital.com/store) Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:44 Ubuntu Flavours 24.10 Released 09:07 Android 16 getting Linux apps 11:47 Gaming on Linux on Apple Silicon 14:24 Inkscape 1.4 Released 19:13 WinAmp really whipped itself 25:43 Rocky Linux from CIQ 34:21 Sovereign Tech Fund: 2 Years & over €23 Million 36:17 Support the show Links: Ubuntu Flavours 24.10 Released https://edubuntu.org/ (https://edubuntu.org/) https://kubuntu.org/ (https://kubuntu.org/) https://lubuntu.me/ (https://lubuntu.me/) https://ubuntu-mate.org/ (https://ubuntu-mate.org/) https://ubuntubudgie.org/ (https://ubuntubudgie.org/) https://ubuntucinnamon.org/ (https://ubuntucinnamon.org/) https://ubuntustudio.org/ (https://ubuntustudio.org/) https://ubuntuunity.org/ (https://ubuntuunity.org/) https://www.ubuntukylin.com/ (https://www.ubuntukylin.com/) https://xubuntu.org/ (https://xubuntu.org/) Pipewire Video & Interview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ri7X_dGNLs (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ri7X_dGNLs) https://destinationlinux.net/363 (https://destinationlinux.net/363) Android 16 getting Linux apps https://www.androidauthority.com/android-linux-terminal-app-3489887/ (https://www.androidauthority.com/android-linux-terminal-app-3489887/) Gaming on Linux on Apple Silicon https://asahilinux.org/2024/10/aaa-gaming-on-asahi-linux/ (https://asahilinux.org/2024/10/aaa-gaming-on-asahi-linux/) Inkscape 1.4 Released https://inkscape.org/news/2024/10/13/inkscape-launches-version-14-powerful-new-accessib/ (https://inkscape.org/news/2024/10/13/inkscape-launches-version-14-powerful-new-accessib/) WinAmp really whipped itself https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/16/opensourcingofwinampgoesbadly/ (https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/16/opensourcing_of_winamp_goes_badly/) Rocky Linux from CIQ https://ciq.com/products/rocky-linux/ (https://ciq.com/products/rocky-linux/) https://rockylinux.org/ (https://rockylinux.org/) https://www.resf.org/ (https://www.resf.org/) https://ciq.com/company/leadership/ (https://ciq.com/company/leadership/) https://www.resf.org/about (https://www.resf.org/about) https://www.resf.org/faq/gregory-kurtzer-owner (https://www.resf.org/faq/gregory-kurtzer-owner) https://www.resf.org/faq/kurtzer-control (https://www.resf.org/faq/kurtzer-control) Sovereign Tech Fund: 2 Years & over €23 Million https://www.sovereigntechfund.de/news/celebrating-two-years-of-empowering-public-digital-infrastructure (https://www.sovereigntechfund.de/news/celebrating-two-years-of-empowering-public-digital-infrastructure) Support the show https://tuxdigital.com/membership (https://tuxdigital.com/membership) https://tuxdigital.com/store (https://tuxdigital.com/store) https://tuxdigital.com/discord (https://tuxdigital.com/discord)
This week Noah and Steve dig into thoughts for light switches if you're starting from scratch. Do you work in a small closet that's been turned into an IT room? Noah gives you a recommendation for a small portable travel laptop stand. With under a year left to switch to Windows 11, there's a surprise at how many people have yet to upgrade. We talk about why that is. -- During The Show -- 01:07 Caller Would you still go with lutron? ZWave kit GE & Brighton How Noah looks at automation Lutron RA2 (https://www.lutron.com/en-US/products/pages/wholehomesystems/ra2select/overview.aspx) Zwave and Home Assistant Industrial system design Shelly Pro (https://us.shelly.com/collections/all-products?filter.p.m.custom.filter_technology=LAN&filter.v.price.gte=&filter.v.price.lte=) Orbit Panels (https://orbitpanels.com/) 11:26 Journal Block Device not loaded - John May be using a file system with out journalling May be using a file system Lynis can't detect GitHub Issue (https://github.com/CISOfy/lynis/issues/1508) 13:25 Thoughts on AXIS Q9307-LV? - Jeremy All Axis cameras work Frigate NVR & Home Assistant Synology Surveillance Station (https://www.synology.com/en-global/surveillance) ONVIF 18:45 Listener Suggestions for Nextcloud Issues - Joe PHP 8.3 vs 8.2 Disable Nextcloud Talk Check compatibility of apps Browser cache 20:38 New Godot fork - Charlie Redot GitHub (https://github.com/Redot-Engine) Website (https://www.redotengine.org/) Let's see if its successful 23:12 News Wire OpenSUSE Leap Micro 6.0 - opensuse.org (https://get.opensuse.org/leapmicro/6.0/) Leap 16 Development - opensuse.org (https://news.opensuse.org/2024/10/07/leap-16-0-prealpha/) Ubuntu 24.10 - canonical.com (https://canonical.com/blog/canonical-releases-ubuntu-24-10-oracular-oriole) Tails 6.8 & 6.8.1 - torproject.org (https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tails-6-8-1/) OpenBSD 7.6 - openbsd.org (https://www.openbsd.org/76.html) KDE Turns 28 - kde.org (https://community.kde.org/28th_birthday) KDE Frameworks 6.7.0 - kde.org (https://kde.org/announcements/frameworks/6/6.7.0/) KDE Plasma 6.2 - kde.org (https://kde.org/announcements/plasma/6/6.2.0/) Linux 6.10 EOL - endoflife.date (https://endoflife.date/linux) Qt 6.8 LTS - qt.io (https://www.qt.io/blog/qt-6.8-released) Python 3.13 - awakenerd.com (http://awakenerd.com/2024/10/14/python-3-13-release-an-overview-of-its-major-features/) RPM 4.20 - rpm.org (https://rpm.org/wiki/Releases/4.20.0) Wayland-protocols 1.38 - freedesktop.org (https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/wayland-devel/2024-October/043851.html) Distrobox 1.8 - github.com (https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/releases/tag/1.8.0) Inkscape 1.4 - inkscape.org (https://inkscape.org/release/inkscape-1.4/?latest=1) OpenTV 1.0 - github.com (https://github.com/Fredolx/open-tv/releases/tag/v1.0.0) OpenRazer 3.9 - phoronix.com (https://www.phoronix.com/news/OpenRazer-3.9-Released) Pyramid Flow - Venturebeat.com (https://venturebeat.com/ai/new-high-quality-ai-video-generator-pyramid-flow-launches-and-its-fully-open-source/) NVLM 1.0 - infoq.com (https://www.infoq.com/news/2024/10/nvlm-nvidia-open-source/) Significant Rise in Malicious Software Components - csoonline.com (https://www.csoonline.com/article/3560646/malicious-open-source-software-packages-have-exploded-in-2024.html) 25:18 Instand Random "IT Rooms" Instand (http://www.instand.com/) Pros and Cons Traveler Guitar (https://travelerguitar.com/) 35:50 Windows 10 EOL In 1 Year MS Requires TPM Chip "Biggest CTRL-ALT-Delete in history" People calling for extending Windows 10 Support Not in the users interest 3 year cycle companies shouldn't have an issue Switch to Linux Steve's thoughts Windows 11 has half the users of Windows 10 Chance to make the case for desktop Linux Take a minute to think The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/14/final_year_windows_10/?td=rt-3a) -- 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/411) 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)
Crear #miniaturas para #youtube con #inkscape y #jinrender de forma automatizada utiliando #jinja2 #rust y #bash con #github actions Llevo ya unos años subiendo vídeos a YouTube, y en este tiempo he ido mejorando tanto la presentación como el flujo de trabajo. Como he comentado en mas de una ocasión, mi objetivo es que sea lo mas automatizado posible. Que desde que creo un vídeo hasta que lo subo no tenga que invertir mi tiempo ni mi esfuerzo. Pero, intentando conseguir un producto de calidad, dentro de las posibilidades que tengo a mi alcance y con las premisas que acabo de indicar. También es necesario intentar agradar al algoritmo de YouTube en la medida de lo posible. Esto es algo que poco a poco he ido mejorando, pero que todavía no tengo completamente resuelto. Lo que si, que tengo resuelto es la creación de miniaturas, portadas o carátulas, y en estos últimos días lo he mejorado sensiblemente con una combinación ganadora. Así, en este episodio te voy a hablar sobre crear miniaturas para YouTube con Inkscape y jinrender. Un poquito de Bash y otro de Rust. Más información, enlaces y notas en https://atareao.es/podcast/635
Crear #miniaturas para #youtube con #inkscape y #jinrender de forma automatizada utiliando #jinja2 #rust y #bash con #github actions Llevo ya unos años subiendo vídeos a YouTube, y en este tiempo he ido mejorando tanto la presentación como el flujo de trabajo. Como he comentado en mas de una ocasión, mi objetivo es que sea lo mas automatizado posible. Que desde que creo un vídeo hasta que lo subo no tenga que invertir mi tiempo ni mi esfuerzo. Pero, intentando conseguir un producto de calidad, dentro de las posibilidades que tengo a mi alcance y con las premisas que acabo de indicar. También es necesario intentar agradar al algoritmo de YouTube en la medida de lo posible. Esto es algo que poco a poco he ido mejorando, pero que todavía no tengo completamente resuelto. Lo que si, que tengo resuelto es la creación de miniaturas, portadas o carátulas, y en estos últimos días lo he mejorado sensiblemente con una combinación ganadora. Así, en este episodio te voy a hablar sobre crear miniaturas para YouTube con Inkscape y jinrender. Un poquito de Bash y otro de Rust. Más información, enlaces y notas en https://atareao.es/podcast/635
The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!
In this episode, we're joined by Martin Owens, Inkscape developer. Brought to you by PCBWay. Register at https://jle.vi/pcbway and get a $5 welcome bonus!Meet Martin Owens, a dedicated Free and Open Source developer with a passion for Inkscape, a leading graphics program used by designers and creators worldwide. As an independent contractor, Martin collaborates closely with his financial supporters to shape the future of Inkscape, focusing on features that empower users. Through engaging videos and social media updates, he shares progress and insights into his work, making Inkscape an invaluable tool for graphic designers and 3D printing enthusiasts alike. Join us as we dive into the world of open-source development and creativity!
In part 2 of covering the best apps for web developers, Scott and Wes dive into must-have tools that will level up your workflow. From screenshot utilities to development tools and video production apps, this episode is packed with recommendations to boost your productivity and creativity. Show Notes 00:00 Welcome to Syntax! 01:44 Brought to you by Sentry.io. 02:30 Utilities. 02:48 BetterTouchTool. 09:31 Hyperkey. 11:46 Amethyst. 12:51 Klack. 13:47 Bottom (Btm). 14:54 Pearcleaner 16:40 App Cleaner. 17:35 Rocket Emoji. 20:27 Clippy. 23:37 Screenshots and Screen Recordings. 24:05 Dropshare. 25:29 OBS with Source Record. 29:20 Screen Studio. 30:58 Detail.co. 31:22 Cap. 32:08 Kap. 32:46 CleanShot X 34:15 Video and Production. 34:24 DaVinci Resolve. 37:46 Affinity Pro. 39:42 PrincipleForMac. 40:39 Inkscape. 41:34 Development tools. 41:38 DBngin. 43:12 TablePlus. 45:48 MongoDB Compass. 46:14 Proxyman. 47:00 Wireshark. 47:31 Polypane. 48:30 Setapp. 49:44 SVG Grabber. 51:42 Sick Picks & Shameless Plugs. Sick Picks Scott: Untold Sign Stealer. Wes: Magentiles Marble Run. Shameless Plugs Hit us up on Socials! Syntax: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Wes: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Scott: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Randy: X Instagram YouTube Threads
Neste Diocast Responde, vamos analisar alguns comentários deixados em nossos episódios aqui no YouTube, comentários como "Linux é muito esforço para pouco benefício" e "Melhor desistir… as pessoas não aprendem" refletem uma visão que merece atenção e discussão. Vamos destrinchar essas questões e debater o panorama atual das distribuições Linux no desktop. Primeiramente, é inegável que aprender qualquer sistema operacional exige um certo nível de dedicação, as distribuições baseadas em Linux não são uma exceção e demandam estudo para serem "dominadas". No entanto, essa jornada do "aprender" pode trazer consigo uma liberdade sem igual e um controle sobre o seu ambiente no computador que pode se muito gratificante. As comunidades de tecnologia e open source são vibrantes, sempre dispostas a ajudar novos usuários, contrariando a ideia de que "as pessoas não aprendem". Aprender é um processo contínuo, seja no Linux ou no cenário open source, estes são ambientes que valorizam o conhecimento compartilhado. Outro ponto levantado é a questão dos sistemas anti-cheat no Linux. Em 2024, ainda estamos discutindo isso? Sim, e com bons motivos. O gaming no Linux tem crescido exponencialmente e, com isso, a demanda pela portabilidade de alguns sistemas anti-cheat famosos só cresce. A boa notícia é que há progressos significativos nessa área, mostrando que a comunidade e os desenvolvedores estão atentos às necessidades dos gamers. Por fim, o design no Linux. A percepção de que o Linux é hostil para designers ainda persiste para alguns. Será mesmo? A realidade é que o Linux tem evoluído constantemente, e hoje oferece uma gama de ferramentas poderosas para designers. Softwares como GIMP, Inkscape e Blender são apenas alguns exemplos de como o Linux pode ser uma plataforma robusta para criação. Em resumo, os sistemas operacionais baseados em Linux são um ecossistema em constante evolução, que se adaptam e superam desafios. É um sistema que recompensa o esforço com controle, liberdade e uma comunidade solidária. Então, antes de desistir, lembre-se: o potencial do Linux é tão vasto quanto a disposição para explorá-lo. E você, o que acha? Participe da conversa nos comentários do Diocast Responde! --- Deixe seu comentário, ele pode ser lido no próximo programa. https://diolinux.com.br/podcast/linux-e-um-sistema-hostil-diocast-responde.html
For beginners seeking free or low-cost graphic design tools, Canva and VistaCreate offer the easiest drag-and-drop interfaces with extensive templates. Adobe Express simplifies professional design tasks, while GIMP provides advanced editing features at the cost of a steeper learning curve. Inkscape is perfect for more experienced users needing precise vector designs. These five platforms cover a wide range of graphic design needs, from basic social media graphics to complex illustrations.
In today's episode, we explore a critical remote code execution vulnerability in the Ghostscript library (CVE-2024-29510) exploited in the wild (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/rce-bug-in-widely-used-ghostscript-library-now-exploited-in-attacks/), the significant impact of the CDK Global cyberattack on Sonic Automotive's sales and operations (https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/sonic-automotive-sales-decline-cdk-attack/720722/), and the rise of the Eldorado ransomware-as-a-service targeting Windows and Linux systems (https://thehackernews.com/2024/07/new-ransomware-as-service-eldorado.html). Tune in to get the latest insights and expert opinions on these pressing cybersecurity issues. Video Episode: https://youtu.be/dGMbjah4Gho Sign up for digestible cyber news delivered to your inbox: news.thedailydecrypt.com 00:00 - Intro 01:00 - Eldorado RaaS Encrypts Windows, Linux Files 03:50 - CDK Cyberattack Cripples Sonic Automotive Sales 05:42 - Ghostscript RCE Bug Exploited in Active Attacks Thanks to Jered Jones for providing the music for this episode. https://www.jeredjones.com/ Logo Design by https://www.zackgraber.com/ Episode Tags Ghostscript, CVE-2024-29510, vulnerability, EPS, remote code execution, Linux systems, high-risk attacks, document conversion, protection, Sonic Automotive, CDK Global, cyberattack, financial performance, Ransomware-as-a-Service, Eldorado, encryption, cross-platform technologies Search Phrases How to protect against Ghostscript CVE-2024-29510 vulnerability Sonic Automotive cyberattack news Impact of CDK Global cyberattack on Sonic Automotive Eldorado ransomware encryption techniques Ghostscript EPS files exploit Ransomware-as-a-Service latest threats Financial impact of cyberattacks on automotive industry Advanced cross-platform ransomware Ghostscript remote code execution vulnerability 2024 Eldorado ransomware victims 2024 Jul9 There is a new ransomware as a service named Eldorado that is now encrypting files on both windows and Linux systems using advanced cross-platform technologies. And it's already targeted 16 victims across multiple industries since its debut in March of 2024. How does Eldorados ransomware encryption method differ from the other well-known strains, like lock bit or baboon? The effects of the CDK global ransomware attack. A few weeks ago, still remain as Sonic automotive vehicle sales have plummeted. How are CDK customers recovering and what are the longterm impacts? It might have on their financial performance. And finally. Thursday, remote code execution, vulnerability in ghost script that comes pre-installed on many Linux systems. That's now being exploited. Through EPS files disguised as JPEGs. How can you protect? The document conversion services against this go scrip, vulnerability. You're listening to the daily decrypt. It's both a sad and exciting day when we get to announce a new ransomware as a service operation. This time it's named Eldorado. And it targets both windows and Linux systems with specialized locker variants. It's specific strain of malware surfaced on March 16th, 2024. As of late June Eldorado has claimed 16 victims with 13 in the U S two in Italy and one in Croatia. And specifically it's targeting industries, including real estate education, professional services, healthcare and manufacturing. So it seems like they don't really have a type they're just looking to get their foot in the door. Eldorado. Is similar to all of the major names in ransomware as a service as it is a double extortion ransomware service which is a devilish tactic that builds on the traditional form of ransomware where threat actors. Would gain access to a network. Encrypt all the files. And then sell you the decryption key for an exorbitant amount of money. So that you can decrypt the files and carry on with your business. Well, it's now evolved to that. Plus they exfiltrate all your data and threatened to sell it on the dark web. If you don't pay. Which is much more effective because standard practices to back up your data. So you can get back up online. And if you do that correctly, Encrypting your data. It doesn't do anything because you'll be able to back it up. Oftentimes it's not done correctly. And your backups are also encrypted. But in the case, We're backups are appropriately implemented. These ransomware artists use double extortion. And this service has all the indicators that is very organized. As the affiliate program was advertised on the ransomware forum ramp, which. Indicates a level of professionalism and organization. You'd see in the top ransomware as a service groups. A security research firm was able to infiltrate this ransomware group and identified the representative as a Russian speaker. And noted that Eldorado does not share any sort of code with the previously. Leaked ransomware like locked bit or Bebout. And like mentioned before. This Target's primarily windows and Linux environments. And the encrypter comes in four different formats. ESX PSI. Yes. 6 64 when and when 64. Which enhances the flexibility and increases its threat potential across different system architectures. Eldorado uses Golang for its cross-platform capabilities. Cha-cha 20 for filing encryption and RSA. Oh, AEP for key encryption, it can also encrypt files. On shared networks using SMB. The windows variant employs a PowerShell command to overwrite the locker file with random bites before deleting it. Uh, aiming to erase the trace. Of the threat actor. And for more key indicators of compromise. Check out the article by the hacker news in our show notes. And I'm hopeful that we won't hear much more about this ransomware as a service. But given its capabilities, we probably will. This next story hits a little close to home, which is why I chose to include it in this episode as my car. Stopped working last night. And I got to spend an hour and a half on the phone with the technicians. Just trying to find me an appointment because all of the scheduling was still down due to the ransomware attack. Needless to say. I couldn't get an appointment at the dealership for. Over a month and a half. Which is in line with what the news is reporting. As an effect of the CDK global ransomware attack that happened three or four weeks ago. So Sonic automotive, which is a fortune 500 company has reported a significant drop in car sales. Since June 19th. Which is due to the fact that all their systems were down. So they weren't able to process these car sales at the same speed people. People still want to buy cars. They just can't. You know, it's kind of like fast food. Is a process that changed the market completely. As far as restaurants go. Because they're just able to serve more and more customers. Faster, thus making more money. But it's like if the stove got ransomwared and we had to take the stove down, right. There are alternate methods. Like maybe they go get some hot plates from target or whatever, but it just slows down the process. Which is exactly what ransomware can do. In fact, over 15,000 car dealerships across north America, rely on CDKs cloud-based services. And in the past couple of weeks, CDK was actually able to fully recover, bringing their core services back online. But the trickle down effect is that. These individual dealers still have to keep their services offline. Or we're unable to fully restore their services. So, yeah, this is just one example of how long it takes to recover. From a ransomware attack. And how helpless you can be if the ransomware attack happened earlier on in the supply chain, like it did here. And finally the hottest new vulnerability being exploited in the wild. Is there a remote code execution vulnerability found in the ghost script document conversion toolkit. That is widely used on Linux systems. And often integrated with software, like. Image magic Libra office. Inkscape scribe us. And all kinds of other softwares. This vulnerability affects all installations of ghost script 10. Point zero 3.0 and earlier it allows attackers to escape the dash D safer sandbox, enabling dangerous operations, such as command execution. And file IO. Attackers are exploiting this vulnerability in the wild. Using EPS files disguised as JPEG images to gain shell access to these vulnerable systems. If you work in it. And either no, or unsure. If your systems are vulnerable. Cody and labs has developed and released a postscript file. That can be used to detect these vulnerable systems. So make sure to check out the link by bleeping computer in the show notes below. So you can keep your system safe. This has been the Daily Decrypt. If you found your key to unlocking the digital domain, show your support with a rating on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. It truly helps us stand at the frontier of cyber news. Don't forget to connect on Instagram or catch our episodes on YouTube. Until next time, keep your data safe and your curiosity alive.
For the occasion of 25 years of Krita and in preparation of Software Freedom Day in September 21st of this year, we wanted to talk with Halla, the lead maintainer of this great project. We asked around and Arnoud stepped up and offered to visit Halla to ask some questions about the project's history and future. The talk is also available as a video on the PeerTube instance of the Digital Freedom Foundation. If you know what Software Freedom Day is, I'm confident that your heart warms up with fond memories. If you don't know what it is, have a look at digitalfreedoms.org/sfd for more info. Basically, it's a grassroots movement from local teams organizing events to tell others about the benefits and importance of software freedom. If you would consider organizing Software Freedom Day where you live, don't hesitate to visit the blog on our site, and get some inspiration for what you could do. With that said, let's listen to the interview between Arnoud and Halla. Enjoy it! Today we're interviewing Halla, who is the lead maintainer of Krita, to learn all about it and to hear where the project has been and where it's going. Halla, to start us off, could you tell us a little bit about what Krita is? Sure. I love telling people about Krita. So Krita is a digital painting application. It's meant to make art from scratch, both still images and animations. So we've got a huge number of brush engines, color spaces for people who need to print and lots of features really focused at creating art from start. For what kind of illustrations would you use Krita? Pretty much everything. I've seen so many different artworks, different styles. People are working on comics in Krita. People are working with illustrations. There are people who design those trade book card with Krita. Games, I mean, whole animated games, like platform games. It's used for all that sort of thing, for everything, in every style, in pretty much every country in the world. Wow. Uh, are there any publications we might know about that have used images created in Krita? There are so many! We got sent a copy of a book on American wild birds. That was entirely done in Krita. Wow, cool. Talk a little bit about yourself. What role did you play in the creation of Krita? This year Krita is 25 years old. Which meant I wasn't there at the absolute beginning. So, in 2003, my parents gave me for my birthday a really small graphics tablet, a Wacom Graphire. And I wanted to use it to draw a map for a fantasy novel I was writing back then. The novel never got finished, because of course I wanted to use Linux as my desktop operating system. And I sort of couldn't get into GIMP, and I started looking around for an application other than GIMP that I could maybe improve or could maybe be good enough. Well, I found Krita. In 2003, it had already gone through three names: KImageShop. That didn't last long. Krayon. That didn't last long either. And it was finally called Krita. It has also gone through three complete rewrites. So when I started working on Krita in 2003, it didn't even have a brush tool. You could open images, add images as layers, and move the layers around. And that was everything. So, it was a really good place to get started. Except, of course, that it turns out that I'm not a genius. I'm not even a computer scientist. I mean, I'm a linguist. And writing a good brush engine is pretty difficult. So, I started blogging about how I was completely failing at creating a nice brush engine. And how is was failing. That turned out to be a turning point for the project because people saw that: "Oh, there's someone working on it, and they're not making any progress, mmm, I will take a look as well." They started getting enthusiastic and pretty soon after 2004, we already had our fourth complete core rewrite. So that's how I got started. So how many people were involved in the Krita community by that time? Mid 2004, it was about a dozen. Krita was still part of KOffice, which was KDE's suite of productivity applications. And KOffice developed that still, because they were porting from one document format to another document format. But suddenly there was an application that we really wanted to release. And that's when KOffice got released again as well. So it's a bit hard to say how many people are actually working on Krita because there were also some people working on the core libraries that every application used, but say a dozen. And can you speak a little bit about how the community evolved since? Yes. Until around 2006, we didn't really have a focus. Krita was a GIMP clone or a Photoshop clone. And, in 2006, David Revoy, a French artist who only uses free software, tried Krita, and he told us it's no good. While we thought we had quite a nice application by then. Afterwards, we started taking this very seriously. So, when we have a sprint, we also invite artists. We actually videotape the artists working with Krita. And that's for the developers a really nice way of getting to know where the bottlenecks are for users. So because we involved artists, our developer community also started to grow. At some point of time, most growth came through Google Summer of Code, but those days are over. That program is not doing a lot anymore. We've only got one student this year. So that started the second phase. Let's make Krita good enough for David Revoy. We also invited Peter Sicking to a print. Peter Sicking is the guy who was involved in defining the mission statement for GIMP. He sat down with us and asked us: "What do you really want to do?" Make Krita good for David Revoy. That's a bit thin as a mission statement. So we came up with we want to make Krita purely a painting application. Sure, there are filters and other stuff, but if it's good for painting, it goes in. So we started working on that and that took quite a long time to get there, especially because we were stupid. We started doing a complete rewrite in 2007 of everything. That was the fifth. So, that continued, everyone was working on Krita as a hobby. Most people were still students, until our Slovak student, Lukáš, was working on his thesis. And his thesis was brush engines for Krita. And of course he got 10 out of 10 because he could show his professors that he had created real software that was used by real people all over the world. And then he was like, okay, I'm almost done with university. What should I do? If you guys can pay my rent, then I can work on Krita full time. If not, I'm going to flip burgers. So I ask him what his rent was. It was like 35 euros a month. So I thought, well, let's do a fundraiser and we can pay you for, say, six months. Six months turned into a year. And after that, Lukas got a job at a different company, but it started sponsored development. And that's been really important for the growth of our community, because by now there are six people working full time on Krita. The second student we hired on graduation was Dmitry Kazakov, a Russian guy, and he's currently our lead developer. So because we're all there, lots of volunteer developers can see that their patches and merge requests get reviewed, they get merged and that makes people happy. So we have a really healthy mix right now of sponsors and volunteer developers. That sounds great. You mentioned sprints a couple of times, can you tell us a little bit more about how that is organized? In theory, we organize one big sprint a year. Of course, it hasn't been possible. Some people have had to flee Russia, for instance. So visa problems are real problems. And the way it mostly used to happen was I would invite everyone to Deventer, have some people sleep upstairs, in our spare bedrooms. And the rest would go to Hotel Royale in Deventer, which has two big rooms on the top floor. Then we'd go down in the cellar of the church. It's a 12th century cellar. Really roomy, and we would just do some hacking, then do a meeting. And in the evenings, we would go out for dinner, and just get to know each other better. One thing that I really miss about sprints, or rather not having sprints, is the time we would spend in my study over there. Just, just a couple of us. The rest would be hacking around. And we would try to just go through the list of bug reports. And for us, sprints are fun. We also invite developers, artists, documentation writers. Yeah, that sounds like a lot of fun. So, if a new contributor would like to join Krita, what would be the typical on ramps that they could come into? It used to be that people would mostly join us on IRC. Nowadays, we also have Matrix, because building Krita from scratch is not easy. But we've got a great manual for that by now. So either people join us on IRC and ask for help building Krita, and then maybe ask, do you know a nice bug or feature ish that I could start working on? And then we, we'd help them with that. But these days it's mostly people who out of the blue, post a merge request on KDE's GitLab instance. And then we're "Oh, this person from Serbia, this person from Denmark, they have suddenly have a really nice patch!" And sometimes a patch needs to be improved. Sometimes it can go in as is. And then we try to get them, in our chat channel, because that's still the place where we have most development discussions. And the mailing list is almost dead, but that holds for many mailing lists. After that, once you've got three merge requests in Krita, merged into Krita, we will ask you: "Do you want to have a developer account, so you can review other people's work, merge it, get full access to everything?" And sometimes they are "Yes, I've always wanted that", and sometimes "I'm not really comfortable with that, I just want to send you more patches", and that's fine. Sounds great. In terms of features, are there any particular features of Krita that you're particularly proud of, or that sets Krita apart from other drawing programs? Over the years, we had a number of firsts. Like, before Adobe even knew that OpenGL existed, we had a hardware accelerated canvas implementation. Then, about the same year, I think it was 2005, we implemented support for all kinds of color models. Like CMYK, LAB, also painterly color models. That's stuff that tries to mix spectral wavelengths to simulate the way paint mixes. That feature is out because it never worked well enough. Then we got, I think, a really nice way of doing animations. Of course the brush engines are great. Oh, and this is something that almost nobody knows, but we support painting in HDR. So color values lower than zero and bigger than one, fully dynamic. And the way we work with those images is compatible with the way Blender imports images. So, you mentioned Blender, are there any other products that Krita works particularly well with, or that are nice complements to Krita? Scribus. Scribus is a desktop publishing application, it's also free software. Development is a bit slow at the moment, but it's really solid. We used it for our 2006, I think it was 2006, Krita art book, for instance. And Inkscape of course, as well. Krita does have vector layers, and they are quite advanced, but still Inkscape is a really good complement. Krita and Inkscape are the only applications that currently implement the W3C mesh gradient standard. Cool, and in terms of current development, which features are you most excited about which are coming up? What's coming up is the port of Qt6, new version of our development library. That's going to really eat development time. But again, we've got some volunteers who already started working on that. I'm not sure I'm really excited about it, but, but we have to investigate it. We are looking into AI assisted inking. So you would train Krita on the way you would normally ink your sketches. And then Krita should be able to semi-automatically ink your sketches for you. Because for many artists inking is a bit of a boring step, because when you're doing inking, you're often really, really careful. And that means that the lines are a bit, often a bit deader compared to the sketch, um, Trying to use AI to assist with that is something we are investigating. We are working on that together with Intel because Intel is one of our corporate sponsors. But we are also doing all kinds of projects with Intel. Like, Intel also worked with us on that HDR feature, for instance. Oh, and text. That's, that's important as well. Volterra has been working on that. The text shape and the text tool, like the object that contains text on canvas and the tool that modifies it are of course two different projects. This will implement full SVG to text including CSS, ligatures, font features and everything. And she's already implemented it. And the text shape itself, it can do vertical text, like for Chinese or Japanese. It can do Ruby, which is the furigana, the small, text that in Japanese you put next to the kanji, the Chinese derived characters, so you know how to pronounce them. And she's now working on the UI, and, and it's something we've wanted to start working on, uh, years ago already, I think it was 2017. Actually, I was working on that, but then I was distracted by the Dutch tax office which wanted to have money. And I had to do difficult stuff and hire accountants and so on. And it's not easy being a manager. So that's the two big things that are coming, hopefully: The experimental assisted inking an a super deluxe text tool. Cool. So what does your release schedule look like? Do you have set dates or is it ready when it's ready? Ready when it's ready, but it's often ready. If our infrastructure is working correctly, then we typically do a bugfix release every two months. There have been years when we did one every month, but that was just eating up too much of our time. We try to have one or two full feature releases a year as well. Of course, we moved from Jenkins as our binary factory platform to GitLab CI. And that means we haven't been able to do a release for six months because so many bits needed fixing, bits were broken. The whole pipeline had to be rewritten. But that's done now. So we just released 5.2.3 beta 1. And we hope to do the 5.3 pretty soon, which is a bug fix release. And 5.3 will be a feature release again. I think we've got almost enough features in there. We're only waiting for the text tool to be completed. That sounds great. In terms of, uh, volunteers, are there any areas that you would really appreciate someone helping out and looking into things? Android experts, because our Android expert started at a very difficult university and doesn't have any spare time anymore. And Android is, is a difficult platform. Platform itself, the libraries, it changes all the time. We do have a UX designer, Scott Petrovic, but more help there would also be welcome. And for the rest, it's actually mostly not what we wish to be done, but what volunteers wish to do and most work is welcome. Sounds great. On the topic of platforms, which platforms does Krita support right now? That's Linux. We prefer our own binary builds in AppImage format because we have to patch a lot of the libraries that Krita depends on. Windows, MacOS, Android. If and when iPadOS gets opened up, we might port to iOS. But both for iOS and Android, Oh, we also support Chrome OS, but that's Android. For iPadOS and Android, so tablet form factor, we really want to optimize our user interface for touch and for that we need to have the port to Qt6 done. So that's going to take some time. Sounds like there's a lot of exciting things coming. I think that's all I have for you today. So I'd like to really thank you for taking the time to speak to us. It was a pleasure. Um, is there any things we haven't covered that you would like to, uh, talk about? Oh, I want to brag a bit. Go for it. Because we have about 7 million users. That's quite a lot. I mean, I used to do commercial software development. And most of the companies we worked for never ever released. So that makes it so much more fun to work on. Yeah, that's genuinely amazing. Awesome. Thank you very much. Thank you, too.
https://youtu.be/P9LJkwlah2g Forum Discussion Thread (https://forum.tuxdigital.com/t/257-gnome-46-linux-6-8-kde-security-warning-fedora-40-beta-amp-more-linux-news/6200) On this episode of TWIL, we've got a brand new kernel to talk about with Linux 6.8. GNOME 46 has been released bringing a ton of desktop related goodies. Fedora and openSUSE have released some betas for us all to try out and test. Red Hat announced a new driver project for NVIDIA support on Linux. All of this and more on this episode of This Week in Linux, Your Source for Linux GNews! Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/719d30df-4bc3-4564-93ac-aee0c4968eb5.mp3) Sponsored by: Kolide - thisweekinlinux.com/kolide (https://thisweekinlinux.com/kolide) Want to Support the Show? Become a Patron = https://tuxdigital.com/membership (https://tuxdigital.com/membership) Store = https://tuxdigital.com/store (https://tuxdigital.com/store) Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:37 Linux 6.8 Released - [link (https://lwn.net/Articles/964784/)] 03:08 GNOME 46 Released - [link (https://foundation.gnome.org/2024/03/20/introducing-gnome-46/)] 06:49 Fedora 40 Beta Released - [link (https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-fedora-linux-40-beta/)] 10:21 Sponsored by Kolide - [link (https://thisweekinlinux.com/kolide)] 11:44 openSUSE Leap Beta & Tumbleweed Updates - [link (https://news.opensuse.org/2024/03/07/leap-reaches-beta-phase/)] 13:37 Nova: Rust-based Linux driver for NVIDIA GPUs - [link (https://lore.kernel.org/dri-devel/Zfsj0_tb-0-tNrJy@cassiopeiae/)] 15:32 KDE Issues Warning After Theme Wipes User Data - [link (https://floss.social/@kde/112128243960545659)] 18:45 Inkscape switching to GTK4 - [link (https://mastodon.art/@inkscape/112151266538190571)] 20:37 Canonical Extends Ubuntu LTS Support To 12 Years - [link (https://ubuntu.com//blog/canonical-expands-long-term-support-to-12-years-starting-with-ubuntu-14-04-lts)] 22:15 Samba 4.20.0 Released - [link (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Samba-4.20-Released)] 22:56 Outro
Martin Green (MegalithicMartin from our discord) joins us this week to begin a three part discussion on his research into megalithic structures in the UK and the possibility they were sophisticated star maps that span for miles across the landscape. This episode, we look at The Devil's Arrows, the Thornborough Henge, and possible connections to Orion and the Pleiades. The BBC program mentioned in the episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGDPfPoIj8Q Paul Devereux simulation of complex layout - https://www.cantab.net/users/michael.behrend/repubs/devils_arrows/pages/main.html DNA Analysis video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXsNKNZtdM0 Download for Stellarium - https://stellarium.org/ Download for Inkscape https://inkscape.org/release/inkscape-1.3.2/ http://megalithic.co.uk http://www.archiuk.com/ Executive Producers: Robert Dressel Philip Baklamov Matt Shy Peter Shell Zachariah Baker Associate Executive Producers: Hagen Thomann Jim Niggles Captain River Rat Chris James Daniel Gandy Dave Cortes Patrick Hicks Thanks to everyone who supports the show! And thanks to Troy for the amazing episode art!
https://youtu.be/EzJpm9YCL4c Forum Discussion Thread (https://forum.tuxdigital.com/t/243-inkscape-lts-kernels-endeavouros-firefox-120-steam-sale-amp-more-linux-news/6074) On this episode of TWIL (243), Inkscape is celebrating 20 years of the project. The Linux Kernel has confirmed which version will be the next LTS. EndeavourOS just release a brand new version. Lock up your wallets because the 2023 Steam Autumn Sale just launched. All of this and more on this episode of This Week in Linux, Your Source for Linux GNews! Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/c5abf30c-3258-4c41-a5cc-81b85e46968b.mp3) Supported by: LINBIT = https://thisweekinlinux.com/linbit Want to Support the Show? Become a Patron = https://tuxdigital.com/membership Store = https://tuxdigital.com/store Chapters: 00:00 TWIL 243 Intro 00:35 Inkscape Celebrates 20 Years - [ link (https://inkscape.org/news/2023/11/18/big-small-release-inkscape-131-is-out/) ] 02:04 Linux Kernel 6.6 Confirmed as an LTS - [ link (https://www.kernel.org/category/releases.html) ] 03:54 EndeavourOS ‘Galileo' Released - [ link (https://endeavouros.com/news/slimmer-options-but-lean-and-in-a-new-live-environment-galileo-has-arrived/) ] 06:34 Mozilla Firefox 120 Released - [ 120 (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/120.0/releasenotes/), git (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Firefox-Going-Git), wayland (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Firefox-Change-Wayland-Release), accounts (https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/firefox-accounts-transition-mozilla-accounts/), ff on android (https://blog.mozilla.org/addons/2023/08/10/prepare-your-firefox-desktop-extension-for-the-upcoming-android-release/) ] 08:45 Steam Autumn Sale 2023 - [ link (https://store.steampowered.com/) ] 10:38 LINBIT 12:03 Calibre 7.0 E-Book Manager Released - [ link (https://calibre-ebook.com/whats-new) ] 13:22 Distrobox 1.6 Released - [ link (https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/releases/tag/1.6.0) ] 14:50 HandBrake 1.7 Released - [ link (https://handbrake.fr/) ] 16:07 Open-Source NVIDIA “NVK” Driver Is Now Conformant For Vulkan 1.0 - [ link (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2023/11/open-source-nvidia-vulkan-driver-nvk-hits-vulkan-10-conformance/) ] 17:21 Outro
On this episode of TWIL (243), Inkscape is celebrating 20 years of the project. The Linux Kernel has confirmed which version will be the next LTS. EndeavourOS just release a brand new version. Lock up your wallets because the 2023 Steam Autumn Sale just launched. All of this and more on this episode of This […]
Ведущие подкаста 'Data Coffee' обсуждают новости и делятся своими мыслями! Shownotes: 0:00 Introduction 0:54 Замена docker desktop 6:19 lazydocker 8:13 Microsoft kills WordPad 9:58 MacOS 14 20:18 Внезапно про групповые звонки в телеграме 22:36 telegram channel boost 24:05 Google turns 25 29:10 Google kills google podcasts 30:34 Yandex DataLens goes open source 33:07 Утечка МТС Банка 34:09 Ozon доставляет машины 36:19 Inkscape 1.3 42:05 Unity балансируют 49:23 Воспоминания об ODBC 52:12 Java 21 54:28 Grafana Pyroscope 58:12 Java 21 напоследок Сайт: https://datacoffee.link, канал в Telegram: https://t.me/datacoffee, профиль в Twitter: https://twitter.com/_DataCoffee_ Чат подкаста, где можно предложить темы для будущих выпусков, а также обсудить эпизоды: https://t.me/datacoffee_chat
Guests Dima Davidoff | Madeline Peck | Michal Malewicz Panelists Pia Mancini | Eriol Fox | Perrie Ojemeh Show Notes Welcome to Sustain Open Source Design! We're at Penpot Fest in Barcelona, Spain having some insightful conversations. Today, Pia, Eriol, and Perrie are joined by three guests. We start off with Dima Davidoff, a product designer, who shares his experiences working as both a freelancer and full-time. He sheds light on his usage design tools and highlights the potential of open source alternatives like Penpot, emphasizing the importance of trust and community in the design world. Next, we speak with Madeline Peck, the team lead for the Fedora design team at Red Hat. She shares her work with several open source programs, stresses the importance of community involvement and outreach in design, and touches on the necessity of greater diversity and inclusion within open source communities. Finally, we speak with Michal Malewicz, a designer with over two decades of experience who now focuses on teaching. He shares his experience working with different types of companies, the importance of solid fundamental design skills, and emphasizes critical learning for designers. Hit download now to hear more! [00:01:19] Our first guest is Dima Davidoff, a Product Designer, who discusses freelancing alongside his full-time job and the differences in design tools used. [00:04:04] Dima shares his frustration with the lack of migration tools from Adobe XD to Figma and questions his trust in the company. [00:05:38] Eriol reflects on the evolution of design tools and emphasizes the importance of community to the development of the tool. Dima advises starting with open source tools for financial reasons and the ability to contribute to the development of the tool, an encourages designers to contribute to open source projects like Penpot. [00:08:57] Dima highlights the importance of user-centered design and the value of open source in listening to user feedback and delivering features promptly. [00:11:32] Our next guest is Madeline Peck, who's an Associate Interactive Designer at Red Hat and the team lead for the Fedora design team. She mentions using open source programs like Inkscape, Penpot, Blendr, and Krita. [00:12:33] Madeline talks about involving the design community in Fedora and Red Hat's work and mentions using different social media platforms to spread the word, such as PeerTube, and the importance of sharing tutorials and engaging with social media to reach a wider audience an promote open source. [00:14:58] Madeline discusses moving away from the logo work and focusing on creating brand identity and asset libraires for teams using tools like Penpot. [00:18:00] She talks about the need for more diversity and inclusion efforts in open source, particularly in terms of representation and creating a welcoming environment for marginalized benefits. [00:19:44] Madeline shares her transition from college to working in open source and the benefits of using open source tools like Inkscape, as well as the need for more open source awareness in educational institutions. [00:21:42] Eriol discusses the challenges educational institutions face in adopting open source tools and the potential impact on design education. [00:22:42] Madeline suggests highlighting the cost savings and the sense of community and collaboration in open source as reasons for students to consider using open source tools and expresses interest in cross-platform collaboration in open source. [00:26:32] We welcome our third guest, Michal Malewicz, a Designer for 24+ years, who now focuses on teaching other designers. [00:27:09] Michal discusses his experience working with both small startups and large corporations, preferring startups right now. The agency is run by his wife, and they focus on projects they are passionate about. [00:28:55] We hear a funny story from Michal about how he started teaching by accident after speaking at a conference, and then being asked to teach at a university. [00:30:25] Perrie asks Michal to talk about some challenges he's had to face, and one is junior designers being focused on trendy tools like Figma and skipping fundamental design skills. [00:33:04] Michal advises designers to follow only a few design influencers and be critical in their learning process. [00:34:44] Michal talks about creating neologisms or hashtags to make design concepts more accessible, and he expresses support for Penpot and their goal of allowing design freedom and self-hosting options. Links Open Source Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/opensrcdesign) Open Source Design (https://opensourcedesign.net/) Sustain Design & UX working group (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/t/design-ux-working-group/348) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) Sustain Open Source Twitter (https://twitter.com/sustainoss?lang=en) Penpot Fest (https://penpotfest.org/) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Pia Mancini Twitter (https://twitter.com/piamancini?lang=en) Eriol Fox Twitter (https://twitter.com/EriolDoesDesign?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Perrie Ojemeh Twitter (https://twitter.com/youfoundperrie) Dima Davidoff Twitter (https://twitter.com/dis1gn) Dima Davidoff Website (https://davidoff.work/) Madeline Peck Website (https://www.madelinepeck.com/) Madeline Peck Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/madelineart/?hl=en) Michal Malewicz Website (https://michalmalewicz.com/) Michal Malewicz YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/c/malewiczhype) Michal Malewicz Twitter (https://twitter.com/michalmalewicz) Penpot Fest (https://penpotfest.org/) PeerTube (https://joinpeertube.org/) Blender (https://www.blender.org/) Blender Beginner Donut Tutorial (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjEaoINr3zgFX8ZsChQVQsuDSjEqdWMAD) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guests: Dima Davidoff, Madeline Peck, and Michal Malewicz.
First up in the news: Mint Monthly News, Fedora Asahi Remix debuts, Wine 8.13 releases, Debian makes RISC-V official, Inkscape 1.3 released, Canonical seizes LXD maintenance, Google will start deleting inactive accounts in December, Google does something “dangerous” to chromium, ChromeOS splits browser from OS, Derrick Wong leaves XFS, In security and privacy: Zenbleed: A new Flaw in AMD Zen 2 Processors Then in our Wanderings: Joe fixes a van, Moss just tries to keep up, Bill rants about Audacity, and Majid joins in the heatwave In our Innards section, we discuss the passing of Kevin Mitnick and a few of its repercussions to the Linux and security communities And finally, the feedback and a couple of suggestions Download
On this episode of This Week in Linux, Asahi Linux announced a major change with a new flagship distro for using Linux on Apple Silicon. GNOME and KDE released some exciting news for their respective desktop environments. systemd has a cool new feature called soft reboot and we have a whole lot of distro news […]
SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/this-week-in-linux/twil-228/
Este podcast chega-vos através de electrões que circulam na rede, saltitando de um lado para o outro, à velocidade da luz. Todos? Não. Alguns electrões com mais vagar ficam para trás e emitem um pequeno murmúrio, muito baixinho: "vão andando, que eu já lá vou ter...". Foram esses electrões que nos ajudaram a fazer este episódio, com grande desfasamento, em que falámos de mistérios de ipv6, upnp, llm, ssd por usb, PrivacyLX, GIMP, Inkscape, hdmi, h4, cmd, vpn e outros acrónimos enigmáticos.
Vojtěch Pavlík the General Manager for Business-Critical Linux joins The Ask Noah Show to discuss SUSE's plans to create a hard fork of RHEL and fill the gap created by Red Hat's recent changes. -- During The Show -- 01:45 News Wire Libre Office 7.5.5 - Document Foundation (https://blog.documentfoundation.org/blog/2023/07/20/libreoffice-7-5-5-community-available-for-download/) Qt Creator 11 - Qt Io (https://www.qt.io/blog/qt-creator-11-released) Inkscape 1.3 - Inkscape (https://inkscape.org/doc/release_notes/1.3/Inkscape_1.3.html) Neptune 8.0 - Neptune OS (https://neptuneos.com/en/start-page.html) Debian 12.1 - Debian (https://www.debian.org/News/2023/20230722) Debian RISC-V Support - Debian (https://lists.debian.org/debian-riscv/2023/07/msg00053.html) CIQ Partner Program - CIQ (https://ciq.com/blog/ciq-partner-program-the-power-of-collaboration-and-ecosystems/) Mesa Performance boosts - WCCF Tech (https://wccftech.com/intels-linux-vulkan-driver-to-boost-gaming-performance-up-to-12-percent-arc-gpus/) GeForce RTX 40 GPUs Support - WCCF Tech (https://wccftech.com/nvidia-geforce-rtx-40-gpus-receive-initial-open-source-support-in-mesa/) Meta llama 2 Catch - Facebook (https://about.fb.com/news/2023/07/llama-2/) 03:05 SUSE Interview Vojtěch Pavlík - General Manager for Business-Critical Linux Red Hat's changes What has SUSE decided to do? SUSE's competitive edge OpenSUSE LEAP Live Patching Confidential Compute SUSE's $10M spend on RHEL SUSE Liberty EU location advantages? Why fork RHEL vs putting $10M into SLE? ISV certifications Is SUSE's RHEL fork competition for SLE? Open Build Service's role 29:32 Setting Up Remote Backup - Tom Tailscale Tinc OpenVPN Fail2ban Backup Strategy? Bandwidth Rsync ZFS Send 34:08 Linux Accessibility - Scout Applications need to add support niche of a niche Vinux Project (https://wiki.vinuxproject.org/) (Discontinued) Sonar (Discontinued) DistroWatch (https://distrowatch.com/table.php?distribution=sonar) KDE window rules 39:25 NFS - Jose SystemD auto mount Steve's FSTAB options nfs noauto,x-systemd.automount,x-systemd.device-timeout=10,timeo=05,nofail 0 0 43:02 Web Site Builders - Walking Penguin Stay on top of wordpress updates Hugo (https://gohugo.io/) 47:10 Podcast Hosting - Walking Penguin Buzzsprout then go to Blubrry Fireside (https://fireside.fm/) Podcasting 2.0 (https://podcastindex.org/) Office Hours 22 (https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/show/office-hours/22/) 51:00 Logos vs Crosswire - Walking Penguin Logos has everything expensive cloudbased Crosswire/Xiphos (https://github.com/crosswire/xiphos) side by side comparisons bookmarks What Noah uses -- 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/347) 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 is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on July 24th, 2023.This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai(00:39): ZenbleedOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36848680&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(02:31): Attention Is Off By OneOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36851494&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(04:34): Twitter has officially changed its logo to ‘X'Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36845111&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(06:17): 40 years ago yesterday Air Canada Flight 143 ran out of fuel mid-flightOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36850111&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(08:00): Inkscape 1.3Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36843794&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:38): Unicode Character “
Guests Alonso Torres | Máirín Duffy | Martin Owens Panelists Pia Mancini | Eriol Fox | Victory Brown | Perrie Ojemeh Show Notes Welcome to Sustain Open Source Design! In this episode, we are live from Penpot Fest in Barcelona, Spain. Pia, Eriol, Victory, and Perrie are hosting, and they'll be interviewing three guests. Our guests joining us today are Alonso Torres, a Front-end Developer at Penpot, Máirín Duffy, a Senior Principal Interaction Designer at Red Hat, and Martin Owens, an Independent Free Software Developer at Inkscape. We'll start with Alonso where we explore the origin of Penpot as a personal innovation project within Kaleidos, and the importance of workflows, community involvement, and Penpot as an alternative to proprietary tools like Figma are highlighted. Then we shift focus to Máirín, where she explains the concept of designing upstream in open source, she shares the benefits of open source tooling, she talks about her current project Podman Desktop, and the evolution of the community design team and how they collaborate with different open source projects. The episode concludes with Martin, who fills us in on being an Independent Developer at Inkscape, he shares his experiment of funding open source development, dives into the influence of companies on open source projects and discusses measuring impact, and the significance of relationships within the open source community. Hit download now! Alonso: [00:01:04] Pia interviews our first guest, Alonso Torres, who shares his role and responsibilities at Penpot and what attracted him to Penpot, and highlights Kaleidos. [00:02:38] Alonso emphasizes that workflows are crucial for Penpot's team, especially when considering how the tool will be used by distributed teams. [00:04:17] Alonso clarifies that Penpot is not a direct competitor to Figma but rather an open source alternative, and they prioritize features based on community feedback and needs. [00:05:22] The majority of core contributors at Penpot are employed by Kaleidos, and they follow agile methodologies, work collaboratively, and have regular meetings to discuss design handoffs and prioritize features. [00:07:21] Alonso acknowledges that collaboration between designers and developers can be challenging, especially in open source projects. He suggests using tools for effective communication and mentions the need for improvement in this area. [00:08:37] Alonso expresses his excitement about being at the festival and highlights the impressive organization and diverse communities present. Máirín: [00:10:25] Eriol interviews our next guest, Máirín Duffy, who discusses her role at Red Hat and the concept of designing upstream in open source. [00:13:10] Máirín explains the concepts of upstream and patching in open source, using analogies and examples to make them more accessible to designers unfamiliar with the terminology. [00:16:22] We hear about the evolution of the community design team and how they expanded their services to collaborate with different open source projects, fostering user-centered design and bridging gaps between projects that might be competitors in a company context. [00:18:51] Máirín shares an example of collaboration between Podman and Podman Desktop teams at Red Hat, highlighting the value of bringing end-user use cases and perspectives to the development process and how it benefits both teams. [00:21:48] Máirín advises designers not to worry about dogma and encourages them to be open to the practical reasons for adopting open source tools. [00:24:06] What's been the highlight of Penpot for Máirín? She mentions Martin Owen's talk on the SVG standard and the proposal for a separate editable SVG standard. Martin: [00:26:02] Victory and Perrie interview our third guest, Martin Owen, an Independent Inkscape Developer, and a free software advocate. He shares his interest in finding practical solutions that enable freedom in software development without compromising the path to achieving it and explains an experiment he's been running. [00:26:50] He explains his experiment of not taking private proprietary software contracts but instead seeking direct funding from designers and users of Inkscape. Martin discusses how companies that pay for open source software development have a significant influence on feature choices and decisions. [00:29:23] Martin explains his three main groups of clients. [00:30:43] Martin addresses the challenge of prioritizing user requests. [00:32:26] Victory asks Martin to highlight any lesser known Inkscape features, and he mentions exploring the extensions and python-based functionalities and watching video tutorials on YouTube. [00:33:34] Martin mentions that tracking metrics is not a priority for the Inkscape project, but he gauges impact through millions of downloads, positive feedback, and seeing the artwork created by users. [00:34:26] If you're interested in looking at Martin's work you can go to his YouTube account for videos and you can help fund his work on Patreon. [00:34:53] Martin emphasizes the importance of relationships within the open source community and suggests that developers form connections with non-programmers to better understand their needs and the impact of their work. Links Open Source Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/opensrcdesign) Open Source Design (https://opensourcedesign.net/) Sustain Design & UX working group (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/t/design-ux-working-group/348) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) Sustain Open Source Twitter (https://twitter.com/sustainoss?lang=en) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Pia Mancini Twitter (https://twitter.com/piamancini?lang=en) Eriol Fox Twitter (https://twitter.com/EriolDoesDesign?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Victory Brown Twitter (https://twitter.com/VictoryBrown_) Perrie Ojemeh Twitter (https://twitter.com/youfoundperrie) Alonso Torres Twitter (https://twitter.com/alotor?lang=en) Alonso Torres LinkedIn (https://es.linkedin.com/in/alonso-javier-torres-ortiz-15377b5) Máirín Duffy Twitter (https://twitter.com/mairin) Máirín Duffy Blog (https://blog.linuxgrrl.com/) Martin Owens Fosstodon (https://fosstodon.org/@doctormo) Martin Owens YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/c/MartinOwens) Martin Owens Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/doctormo) Penpot Fest (https://penpotfest.org/) Penpot (https://penpot.app/) Podman Desktop (https://podman-desktop.io/) Inkscape (https://inkscape.org/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guests: Alonso Torres, Máirín Duffy, and Martin Owens.
Concepts A poker deck is a great starting point for developing game mechanics without getting distracted by what the game assets will look like. Playing cards have lots of unique things you can structure game play around, like two colours, four suits, face cards, Joker, and so on. Tarot cards add even more variety, because a tarot deck usually has unique art on every card, which provides you plenty of elements to work with. Etsy has lots of custom tarot decks that are beautifully designed by indie artists. Design TheGameCrafter.com has card templates for Inkscape. An easier option is to use LibreOffice Draw. Go to Page > Page Properties > and set page size to 57mm x 89mm (2.25 x 3.5 inches). Minimalism is a great tool for any content creator on a budget. Think of the simplest requirement to convey your game mechanic. If your cards look better than your game mechanics play, nobody's going to play your game. Spend your time and effort on the game, not the design. (There's a balance to be struck, though. If your game assets make no sense and people can't figure out how to play the game, that's a problem too.) Resources Arcmage.org Petition card game Open Game Art Freesvg.org You can also look through places like Artstation.com and Deviantart.com, but finding Creative Commons and consistent-looking art is a challenge.
4/12/23 - Episode 105.In this podcast episode, Scott Austin provides an update on using images in Shopify stores in 2023. He emphasizes the importance of images for effective communication and design, and discusses different image file types such as raster (JPG, PNG, and WEBP) and vector images (SVG). He advises against using GIFs due to large file sizes and suggests using HTML5 video format for animations.Scott recommends using SVG for graphics like logos and icons, JPG for photos, PNG for graphics when SVG is unavailable, and WEBP for better compression. He also explains where images are stored in the Shopify Admin and provides best practices for image management.Image editing software discussed in the episode includes Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and Premiere Pro, as well as open-source tools like GIMP, BIMP, Inkscape, and Canva. Scott wraps up by highlighting Shopify's improvements, such as support for more file types and image optimization services, allowing users to focus on growing their businesses.SHOW TRANSCRIPT - https://jadepuma.com/blogs/the-shopify-solutions-podcast/episode-105-all-about-images-in-your-shopify-storeSHOW LINKSVideo in Your Shopify Store - https://jadepuma.com/blogs/the-shopify-solutions-podcast/episode-39-video-in-your-shopify-storeFlex Theme (affiliate link) - use coupon code 'AUSTIN10'SOFTWARE LINKSAdobe Creative Cloud - https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/plans.htmlGIMP - https://www.gimp.org/downloads/BIMP - https://alessandrofrancesconi.it/projects/bimp/ Inkscape - https://inkscape.org/release/ Canva - https://www.canva.com/HELP THE PODCASTLeave a review - https://ratethispodcast.com/solutions Apply for Shopify Store Consult Podcast Episode - https://jadepuma.com/pages/podcast-consult-application
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on April 21th, 2023.(00:36): CATL has announced a new “condensed” battery with 500 Wh/kgOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35649935(02:03): The EARN IT bill is back, seeking to scan our messages and photosOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35655282(03:15): GitHub Copilot emits GPL codeOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35657982(04:41): Tech bosses are letting dictators censor what Americans seeOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35653867(06:16): Inkscape is hiring: Accelerating the GTK4 migrationOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35650663(07:31): Nuclear Power Is the Answer to Global and Environmental Energy WoesOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35658318(08:51): The weird world of Windows file pathsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35654574(10:08): ChatGPT could cost over $700k per day to operate Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35652434(11:20): Windows on BtrfsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35660186(12:44): Scaling Databases at ActivisionOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35655910This is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
#InkScape #Logodesign #Professional #Software #Art YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MichaelGarzaShow Mint Mobile: http://fbuy.me/t5tLM Discover Card: https://refer.discover.com/s/MICHAEL6043675 Spotify Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/6dBGAg9qohEoWba5VMPMP8 Rumble!: https://rumble.com/MichaelGarza Website: https://garzamedia.net Capital One: https://capital.one/3IqGDer Robinhood: https://join.robinhood.com/michaeg4251 The Michael Garza Show is not financial advice but only for entertainment and educational purposes. I am not a financial advisor, so invest at your own risk. I am an entertainer at heart and an experienced long-term investor. I do not teach day trading or those idiotic short-term investing strategies. I believe that buy and hold and diversification are the best strategies you can have in the markets. Inkscape, inkscape tutorial, logos by nick, logosbynick, nick saporito, inkscape tutorials, adobe illustrator, how to use inkscape, inkscape for beginners, rick johanson, learn inkscape, inkscape course, inkscape vectorize png, vectorize png logo, inkscape png to svg, adobe illustrator vs inkscape harmony, illustrator, inkscape software, inkscape design, 2d animation software easy to use, android 2d animation software, best 2d animation program for beginners --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/michaelgarza/support
Welcome to Episode 83 Pierre's Burning bridges big style ! Steves got some intelligence, well artificial intelligence at least! And he has a day out to meet the fantastic furniture maker Nick James @nickjamesdesign This is 'The Three Northern Makers', the podcast that's all about making things, breaking things, and making things you broke look like they were always meant to be that way. A Big thanks to everyone for listening to the show your all awesome and please pass the Pod onto a friend or even an enemy! And please don't forget your furniture strap some headphones on the sofa we're sure it will love The Three Northern Makers We launched our Patreon page and we are so blown away by your response so thank you so much we both really appreciate your support We have a new Patreon this week Glenn Knight who can be found on instagram @no1_projects and on YouTube at No 1 Projects thanks so much Glen Thanks very much to all our Patreons Special thanks to our existing top tier patreons Arne @mangesysleren, Rich Coney @coneywoodcreations, Ola Skytteren @olaskytteren, Marius Bodvin @mariusbodvin & @arendalleather, Richard Salvesen @salvesendesign, Bjorn from @interiormaker.b.hagen. and Rodger Anderson @rvadesign182 If you want to support the Show and listen to the aftershow we have a Patreon page please click the link https://www.patreon.com/user?u=81984524 Steve Has been obsessed with a Youtube channel called Crafty Stax for great info on SVG's and how to make your own from old cartoons that are in the public domain. Plus get tips on using the free design program Inkscape, go take a look. A big thank you to Nick James @nickjames design for the great chat and the tour of your amazing workshop and also big thank you to all the other awesome lovely creators we met @mushroomworks Pierre Is also obsessed with a song that he just can't get out of his head called Heaven by Niall Horan. Pierre is also obsessed with a series on Netflix called The Night Agent about a demoted agent, the series is non stop excitement and it strangely helps Pierre sleep! Don't forget the aftershow on Patreon and Our Discord link is in our instagram profile The Three Northern Makers Are Steve @stevebellcreates on instagram and YouTube at Steve Bell Creates lives in North Yorkshire in the UK Pierre @theswedishmaker on Instagram and The Swedish Maker on YouTube Pierre lives near Gothenburg in Sweden We can be found on instagram @threeNorthernMakers so check us out We also have our own woodworking/makers community on Discord.com We will be releasing a new episode every Sunday morning so please subscribe like and leave a review to hear our humble ramblings about making things and all that life throws at us If you have any questions or comments please email the show at threenorthernmakers@gmail.com
How to create vector graphics in the SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) format by text editor or Inkscape. Demo code – https://github.com/levidsmith/KnoxGameDesign/tree/master/svg Links and Notes Podcast theme music – Ride by Pocketmaster
In Episode 56 the guys discuss the following topics:· White Sox and Giant talk· No football talk· Police free agents· Etsy talk – Easter empty tomb· Inkscape talk· Old man talk· Mike may be in trouble in regards to the shop· Breaking news! A yearlong sponsor!· Rookie is not engaging!· Pre Fight Indicators· Someone is dropping bodies above Mike· Mike is frustrated by unsolved crimes· Another Cook County f up· Illinois puts a stay on the SAFT Act· Brandon is making pizzasOfficer Down Memorial Pagehttps://www.odmp.org/search/year/2021A HBLA ProductionProducer: Mike MarrazzoDirector: Mike MarrazzoEditor: Mike MarrazzoWritten by: Mike Marrazzo & Brandon SilveiraCreated by: Mike MarrazzoHost: Mike Marrazzo Co-Host: Brandon SilveiraMusic used from: https://FesliyanStudios.comFollow Handcuffs & Sawdust on social media:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/handcuffsan...Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Handcuffsand...YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCy0OFXFWnb4p7BriVF4-n5wSupport Mike on his social media accounts:Website: https://www.marrazzowoodworking.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marrazzowoodworking/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCokB...Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/Marrazzowoodworking?ref=seller-platform-mcnav Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/marrazzowoodworkingSupport Brandon on his social media accounts:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fullhousewo...Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/FullHouseWo...
This week, Linux Out Loud chats about festive-themed games. Welcome to episode 44 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:01:49 Game Sphere Unboxing 00:05:14 New Retro Video 00:08:08 PETG 00:18:09 Getting Festive 00:29:29 Game of the Week 00:33:17 5V Lights 00:36:24 Cricut in a Bottle 00:43:35 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-44/ Our sponsors: - Digital Ocean - http://do.co/tux2022 - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))
This week, Linux Out Loud chats about geek gift ideas. Welcome to episode 43 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:00:59 FLL Update 00:06:00 Internet Upgrade 00:13:18 Christmas Lights 00:22:55 Gifts for Geeks 00:53:45 New Toy 00:56:59 Retro LAN 01:05:02 Retro Tech Table 01:09:49 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-43/ Our sponsors: - Digital Ocean - http://do.co/tux2022 - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/)) Special Guest: Bill.
Martin Owens joins us on this episode to talk about the popular open source vector graphics package Inkscape, where he serves as both a developer and a member of the project's leadership committee. Martin shares his perspective on everything from the position of Inkscape in the digital creative market to its exceptionally distributed, consensus-based leadership model, implementing PDF support from scratch, the elusive CMYK support, and a lot more.Learn more about and download Inkscape: https://inkscape.org/Martin's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/MartinOwensMartin's page on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/doctormoThe FOSS Pod is brought to you by Google Open Source. Find out more at https://opensource.google
This week, Linux Out Loud chats about does crowd funding pay off. Welcome to episode 42 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:02:28 3D Printer Fix 00:09:25 Cricut on Linux 00:19:31 New Build 00:29:21 Backed by the Bunch 00:41:07 DIY Lego Table 00:47:02 Fan Curve 00:50:37 IoT Security 01:02:01 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-42/ Our sponsors: - Digital Ocean - http://do.co/tux2022 - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/)) Special Guest: Bill.
This episode of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick is chock full of recommendations straight from my writer's toolkit: the software and services I use day in / day out in my creative endeavors and in my work helping other creative writers. Also in the episode: more hints at what's to come for my patron member community, and a bit more on the situational depression that still lingers since the previous episode. Links and Topics Mentioned in This Episode Dynalist is my offboard brain, as well as my to-do list keeper and an excellent outliner. Simplicity makes it as complex as you want it to be. First on the list because it's my most valued tool. Notepad++ is a plain text editor on steroids... it's really "double plus good." Scrivener is accepted as the standard writer's outliner, word processor, asset organizer, and formatter... but its "everything and the kitchen sink" nature is exactly why I use it -- and recommend it -- only grudgingly. A free, much lighter, and more focused program is yWriter, which I find almost just right for the way I like to write. Here's an article I wrote about yWriter, especially as it compares to Scrivener. Try them both. Use them both! You may find one or both are just right for you. The free Q10 is my favorite full-screen, distraction-free plain text editor and the one writing tool with which I can most often slip into the coveted flow state. Highly recommended! There are many mind-mapping software options, some free, some not. None of them offer the simplicity and flexibility I find with Mindomo. Do you use a whiteboard? Do you wish you had a whiteboard with functionally infinite space and deep zoom? How about one on any of your devices? How about for free? Check out Excalidraw. Microsoft Word (and its attendant Microsoft Office suite, which apparently is now called Microsoft 365 or some such), is synonymous with word processing (and spreadsheets and so on). Did you know there's a completely free alternative that's also compatible with the offering from Redmond? Check out LibreOffice. You might not ever pay Microsoft a subscription fee again. Speaking of icky software-by-subscription attempted monopolies: When it comes to image creation and manipulation and desktop publishing, the Adobe suite of Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign are the assumed defaults. They can also be expensive..! While there are free alternatives for bitmap image editing and creation, vector image creation, and desktop publishing (GIMP, Inkscape, and Scribus, respectively), in my experience they're not quite ready for prime time. I use a for-pay suite of products that give the Adobe programs a run for their money... and cost far less of your money, too! Check out the Affinity applications Photo, Designer, and Publisher, and cancel your Adobe subscription! I use Affinity Publisher to design the interiors of paperback and hardcover books for myself and for clients. For e-books? While there are a number of "meatgrinder" solutions out there, I prefer the free, open source Sigil to create industry-standard EPUB e-books (suitable for any e-book reader / device / marketplace except Amazon, and capable of perfect conversion to the format(s) Amazon does use). We're in an era when being a writer also means being... a content creator. And that usually means recording, and editing, video. You can get away with the basics using the programs that came with your computer, or even simply using your phone. But when you want to take it up a notch and create professional grade, high definition videos... did you know there's a free tool that will let you do just that? Once again: there's no need to turn to an Adobe subscription or pay hundreds of dollars for a software license. The free version of DaVinci Resolve gives you everything you need... and lots of features and capabilities you might not realize you need to make really good looking videos. My latest non-fiction book is Indie Author Marketing Infrastructure, a distillation of some of what I teach when I coach new writers considering self-publishing. I mention the day job, which is helping authors, podcasters, and other creators bring their creative endeavors to fruition, to market, and to an audience. Can I help you? Hazy Days and Cloudy Nights: "How It All Got Started" is my fiction serial set in the 1980s and delivered weekly, for free, to subscribers. Get in on it and start at the beginning! My patron community receives the uncut, unedited version of every episode. For this episode, they're privy to almost fifteen minutes of extra content! Want in on that? Become a patron for at least $5.00 per month (cancel any time) and get a bunch of other perks and special access, too. Around thirty people listen to each new episode of this show during the first week it's released. If most of the listeners became Exceptional patrons ($5.00 per month), patron revenue would surpass $100 per month, and I could begin donating 10% every month to 826 National in support of literacy and creative writing advocacy for children. Let's go! Oh, and speaking of patronage: This episode was made possible in part by the patronage of listeners like you, including J. C. Hutchins, Ted Leonhardt, and Chuck Anderson! Want to support the show and be listed in the credits, plus get lots of other goodies, perks, and exclusive access? Become a patron with a $5 monthly pledge! Love Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick and would like to make a one-time donation in support of the show? Donate via PayPal or leave a tip via Ko-Fi, with my grateful thanks.
Erica, Gil, and Sen discuss some of the tools and processes they use at the various phases of designing a game from their varying perspectives of an in-house designer, a publisher, and freelance designer/developer. SHOW NOTES: 00:08:31 DDS is an acronym for Detailed Design Specification 00:11:38 LucidChart browser-based flowcharting and more www.lucidchart.com 00:18:43 Canva free online graphic design tool www.canva.com 00:19:13 Tabletop Simulator is a virtual tabletop (VTT) run on Steam www.tabletopsimulator.com 00:19:14 Tabletopia is a browser-based VTT www.tabletopia.com 00:21:26 Also known as an MVP - a “Minimum Viable Prototype” 00:21:45 Filemaker Pro is a relational database www.claris.com 00:21:57 Nandeck is cardmaking software www.nandeck.com 00:22:05 Component Studio is a full game design suite that is hooked up to the Game Crafter https://component.studio/ 00:26:06 Adobe Creative Suite is the industry standard for the industry in terms of graphic design www.adobe.com 00:27:54 Photopea is an online Photoshop equivalent for raster images www.photopea.com 00:28:29 GIMP is an open source Photoshop equivalent www.gimp.org 00:29:15 Inkscape is a free equivalent of Illustrator for vector images www.inkscape.org 00:29:57 The Affinity Suite is a one-time payment suite of graphic design and illustrative tools https://affinity.serif.com 00:36:46 Fiskars Rotary Cutter is Sen's weapon of choice www.fiskars.com/en-us/crafting-and-sewing/products/rotary-cutters-mats-and-rulers 00:37:13 Arc punches, square punches and corner punches, oh my! This is an example of a 1” arch punch: www.amazon.ca/General-Tools-Instruments-1271M-1-Inch/dp/B00004T7WH 00:41:36 Midjourney and Dall-e are prompt-based AI Art generators www.midjourney.com / https://openai.com/blog/dall-e/ 00:44:58 Some great sources for icons etc. www.flaticon.com https://thenounproject.com https://game-icons.net 00:45:32 Face generating software ThisPersonDoesNotExist https://thispersondoesnotexist.com/ 00:48:46 Functional Fixedness is the psychological phenomena when a person cannot see any other use for an item because their initial understanding of how it's used is the only way they think it can be used 00:49:10 Sunk Cost Fallacy occurs when a person will not make a change, even one that is likely to be highly beneficial, due to the perceived amount of time, money, effort, etc.they have already invested in the current strategy 00:55:58 You can record your screen right from Windows https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/record-the-screen-d70508e8-25a3-4b97-b78a-a467b5372e21 and MacOS https://support.apple.com/en-ca/HT208721
On this episode of This Week in Linux: Inkscape 1.2, NixOS 22.05, GNOME Shell for Mobile, /e/OS & Murena One Smartphone, HP Dev One with PopOS, Linux Mint Are New Developers of Timeshift, Flatseal 1.8, PulseAudio 16.0, and Ubuntu 22.10 Switching to Pipewire. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! […]
SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/this-week-in-linux/twil-200/
This week's episode of Destination Linux, we're headed to Jill's Museum to go on a Treasure Hunt! This one contains a multiverse of treasures with the COSMIC INFINITY powered by an Intel Pentium Pro! Then we're going to chat about Inkscape's latest version. Plus we've also got our famous tips, tricks and software picks. All of this and so much more this week on Destination Linux. So whether you're brand new to Linux and open source or a guru of sudo. This is the podcast for you. FrontPageLinux.com ►► https://frontpagelinux.com Sponsored by: Digital Ocean = https://do.co/dln Bitwarden = https://bitwarden.com/dln Hosted by: Michael Tunnell = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Jill Bryant = https://jilllinuxgirl.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus DLN Store = http://dlnstore.com Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Chapters: 00:00:00 = Welcome to DL 266 00:00:59 = Announcement: New Destination Linux YouTube Channel! 00:02:45 = Community Feedback: Accessibility in Linux 00:11:44 = DigitalOcean Cloud Services ( https://do.co/tux2022 ) 00:13:04 = Jill's Treasure Hunt Is Back with "COSMIC INFINITY"! 00:54:08 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 00:55:30 = News: Inkscape 1.1.2 Released and 1.2 Alpha 01:02:29 = Software Spotlight: Inkscape Extensions 01:03:35 = Tip of the Week: How To Find The Fastest Repo Mirror Near You 01:05:57 = Linux Events to check out 01:06:37 = Outro Linux #OpenSource #Podcast
On this episode of This Week in Linux, KDE Plasma 5.24, KDE Discover Redesign, Intel Joins RISC-V International, Mozilla Firefox 97, Inkscape 1.1.2, OpenMandriva Lx 4.3, Qubes OS 4.1.0, Steam Deck Hands-On Hardware Reviews, DBrand's Project Killswitch, The Nobara Project, Escuelas Linux 7.3, Absolute Linux 15.0, Twister OS & Twister UI. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! SPONSORED BY: DigitalOcean ►► https://do.co/dln Bitwarden ►► https://bitwarden.com/dln TWITTER ►► https://twitter.com/michaeltunnell MASTODON ►► https://mastodon.social/@MichaelTunnell DLN COMMUNITY ►► https://destinationlinux.network/contact FRONT PAGE LINUX ►► https://frontpagelinux.com MERCH ►► https://dlnstore.com BECOME A PATRON ►► https://tuxdigital.com/contribute This Week in Linux is produced by the Destination Linux Network: https://destinationlinux.network SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/twil185 00:00 = Welcome to TWIL 185 00:41 = Announcement: I'm Hosting Linux Saloon This Week 01:24 = KDE Plasma 5.24 Released 08:13 = KDE Discover Redesign Has Begun 09:05 = Intel Joins RISC-V International 11:27 = Mozilla Firefox 97 Released 13:41 = DigitalOcean App Platform ( https://do.co/dln ) 14:51 = Inkscape 1.1.2 Released 17:37 = OpenMandriva Lx 4.3 Released 21:13 = Qubes OS 4.1.0 Released 24:50 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln 26:19 = Steam Deck Hands-On Hardware Reviews 27:46 = DBrand's Project Killswitch 28:56 = The Nobara Project 33:22 = Visuex.com: Design & Digital Marketing ( https://visuex.com/dln ) 34:25 = Escuelas Linux 7.3 Released 36:23 = Absolute Linux 15.0 Released 37:39 = Twister OS & Twister UI 40:02 = Outro Other Videos: 7 Reasons Why Firefox Is My Favorite Web Browser: https://youtu.be/bGTBH9yr8uw 17 KDE Plasma Features That You Didn't Know About: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhPIwFC4qFs How To Use Firefox's Best Feature, Multi-Account Containers: https://youtu.be/FfN5L5zAJUo 5 Reasons Why I Use KDE Plasma: https://youtu.be/b0KA6IsO1M8 Thanks For Watching! Linux #TechNews #Podcast
This week's episode of Destination Linux, we have everyones favorite hacker Bo on for his hack shack snack segment. Then we take a look at the recent updates with Inkscape and some rumors coming from Valve. Plus we've also got our famous tips, tricks and software picks. All of this and so much more this week on Destination Linux. So whether you're brand new to Linux and open source or a guru of sudo. This is the podcast for you. Sponsored by: Digital Ocean = https://do.co/dln Bitwarden = https://bitwarden.com/dln Hosted by: Michael Tunnell = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Jill Bryant = https://twitter.com/jill_linuxgirl Noah Chelliah = https://asknoahshow.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus DLN Store = http://dlnstore.com Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-228 00:00 = Welcome to DL 228 00:56 = Community Feedback: Truesona & Multi-Factor Authentication 09:21 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 11:24 = News: Inkscape 1.1 Released 22:38 = News: Is Valve Making A Nintendo Switch Competitor? (Steam Handheld Gaming) 31:36 = Digital Ocean: App Platform / Cloud ( https://do.co/dln ) 32:38 = Bo's Hack Snack: How To Fight Off Annoying Telemarketing Calls 39:58 = Linux Gaming: Outbreak Endless Nightmares 41:14 = Ryan & Michael Stream CS:GO on DasGeek Channel 43:12 = Software Spotlight: cheat.sh (Command-line Cheatsheet) 44:52 = Tip of the Week: Turn A Raspberry Pi into a Stream Link 46:27 = DLN News: Fedora Podcast Is Back & Has Joined DLN! 49:57 = Outro 50:09 = Become a Patron for Extras & Bonus Content 50:38 = Join us Live on Sundays at DLNLive.com 50:49 = New Merch Drop at DLNStore.com! 51:14 = More Great Content at DestinationLinux.Network 52:04 = Patron Postshow Preview Join Odysee With Our DLN Invite Link = https://odysee.com/$/invite/@destinationlinux:9 Linux #OpenSource #Podcast
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we've got a new announcement from DLN regarding the Fedora Podcast. In Distro News, we've got new releases from AlmaLinux OS, Lakka and a new Floppy related distro. We've got some legal news to discuss this week as Audacity is back in the news with some more controversial stuff going on. A user was informed by their ISP that apparently downloading Ubuntu is somehow bad. In Security News were going to talk about Firefox's new security architecture Firefox Fission and apparently FBI is going to begin sharing breach / password data with the public. I'll you know what that's all about as well as so much more coming up on this week episode of TWIL, Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! SPONSORED BY: Digital Ocean ►► https://do.co/dln Bitwarden ►► https://bitwarden.com/dln TWITTER ►► https://twitter.com/michaeltunnell MASTODON ►► https://mastodon.social/@MichaelTunnell DLN COMMUNITY ►► https://destinationlinux.network/contact FRONT PAGE LINUX ►► https://frontpagelinux.com MERCH ►► https://dlnstore.com BECOME A PATRON ►► https://tuxdigital.com/contribute This Week in Linux is produced by the Destination Linux Network: https://destinationlinux.network SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/twilEP# 00:00 = Welcome to TWIL 153 01:16 = Fedora Podcast Is Back! 02:42 = AlmaLinux OS 8.4 Stable Released 05:20 = ISP Issues DMCA Notice for Downloading Ubuntu 09:14 = Audacity Introducing CLA? 20:32 = Digital Ocean: VPS / App Platform ( https://do.co/dln ) 22:13 = Inkscape 1.1 Released 26:18 = Firefox's New Site Isolation Architecture 29:14 = Have I Been Pwned Goes Open Source 32:48 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 35:25 = This Week in KDE: KCommandBar 38:46 = Floppinux: Linux On A Floppy 40:16 = Lakka 3.0 Released 42:35 = Glimpse Image Editor on Hiatus 55:04 = Outro Other Videos: 7 Reasons Why Firefox Is My Favorite Web Browser: https://youtu.be/bGTBH9yr8uw How To Use Firefox's Best Feature, Multi-Account Containers: https://youtu.be/FfN5L5zAJUo 5 Reasons Why I Use KDE Plasma: https://youtu.be/b0KA6IsO1M8 6 Cool Things You Didn't Know About Linux's History: https://youtu.be/u9ZY41mNB9I Thanks For Watching! Linux #TechNews #Podcast
On this episode of This Week in Linux, Red Hat Announces new updates for the CentOS situation in that you can now get RHEL at No-Cost. We're also going to be talking about a new piece of hardware from the Raspberry Pi Foundation called the Pico. Then we will check out some more Enterprise-y goodness from SUSE. Plus we've got some updates related to running Linux on Apple M1 Mac. We've also got some app news related to graphics tools Inkscape & Krita plus a not so ideal update from Google for Chromium. Later in the show we will discuss some distro news including Linux Mint having a big screensaver bug & Ubuntu announced their plans for Ubuntu 21.04 in regards to GNOME 40. 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 TWITTER ►► https://twitter.com/michaeltunnell MASTODON ►► https://mastodon.social/@MichaelTunnell DLN COMMUNITY ►► https://destinationlinux.network/contact FRONT PAGE LINUX ►► https://frontpagelinux.com MERCH ►► https://dlnstore.com BECOME A PATRON ►► https://tuxdigital.com/contribute This Week in Linux is produced by the Destination Linux Network: https://destinationlinux.network SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/twil135 00:00 = Welcome to This Week in Linux 135 01:19 = DLN News: Live Streams DLN Store & the Forums 02:54 = Red Hat Announces No-Cost RHEL 10:48 = Raspberry Pi Pico 14:46 = SUSE Details Plans for SLE / openSUSE 21:17 = Digital Ocean - VPS & App Platform ( https://do.co/dln ) 22:53 = Linux on Apple M1 Mac by Correllium 28:29 = Inkscape 1.0.2 & 1.1alpha Released 33:59 = Krita 4.4.2 Released 37:35 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 40:04 = Linux Mint Screensaver Bypass Vulnerability 46:14 = Ubuntu 21.04 Not Shipping GNOME 40 50:40 = Distros Consider Removing Chromium 58:12 = Outro Other Videos: 7 Reasons Why Firefox Is My Favorite Web Browser: https://youtu.be/bGTBH9yr8uw How To Use Firefox's Best Feature, Multi-Account Containers: https://youtu.be/FfN5L5zAJUo 5 Reasons Why I Use KDE Plasma: https://youtu.be/b0KA6IsO1M8 6 Cool Things You Didn't Know About Linux's History: https://youtu.be/u9ZY41mNB9I Thanks For Watching! Linux #OpenSource #TechNews
In this episode we talk about some good things that came from this semester, things that went bad and a few ugly things. Link to Inkscape videos Download for Inkscape If you have topic ideas or want to reach out to us our email is SGRpodcast@gmail.com Check out the podcast website at https://safetyglassesrequired.libsyn.com/ Check out our YouTube pages: John Chris
This Week in Linux is a Proud Member of the Destination Linux Network! https://destinationlinux.network Sponsored by Digital Ocean - https://do.co/dln On this episode of This Week in Linux, we have SO MUCH DISTRO NEWS! In fact, we've got news from Fedora, PopOS, Red Hat, openSUSE, and a follow up for the Ubuntu 20.04 release. Last week, I said we're going to give the official Ubuntu Flavours an extra week to discuss their 20.04 releases since there are so many to discuss and that time has come. There are 7 Ubuntu Flavours and all of them have a 20.04 release with some really interesting stuff happening in each one. If that wasn't enough, Inkscape 1.0 has finally be released after 16 Years of continuous develop so this episode is just jam packed with Linux News. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! Become a Patron: - https://tuxdigital.com/patreon - https://tuxdigital.com/sponsus - https://tuxdigital.com/contribute Other Links: - https://destinationlinux.network/store - https://michaeltunnell.com Segment Index: Show Notes - https://tuxdigital.com/twinl102 00:00:53 = Sponsored by Digital Ocean ( https://do.co/dln ) 00:02:28 = Fedora 32 Released 00:07:33 = Inkscape 1.0 Released 00:17:07 = Pop!_OS 20.04 Released 00:22:07 = Red Hat and openSUSE Virtual Summits 00:24:42 = Lubuntu 20.04 LTS Released 00:32:57 = Kubuntu 20.04 LTS Released 00:38:39 = Front Page Linux 00:41:00 = Destination Linux 00:43:35 = Become a Patron of TuxDigital & TWinL 00:44:47 = Ubuntu Studio 20.04 LTS Released 00:51:00 = Ubuntu Kylin 20.04 LTS Released 00:54:22 = Ubuntu Budgie 20.04 LTS Released 01:00:38 = Ubuntu MATE 20.04 LTS Released 01:06:12 = Xubuntu 20.04 LTS Released 01:07:55 = Outro Linux #GNews #OpenSource
This Week in Linux is a Proud Member of the Destination Linux Network! https://destinationlinux.network Sponsored by Digital Ocean - https://do.co/dln On this episode of This Week in Linux, we have a lot of interesting news to cover including some Application News from Inkscape and a command-line search tool called "fd". We've also got some Distro News from Ubuntu, PopOS, and Umix OS. We'll cover a really cool tip that was shared on the r/linux subreddit this week related to Bluetooth and PulseAudio. We've also got a really interesting new fork in the KDE world because theres a new project that is a fork of KWin. Oh yea, I almost forgot to mention . . . this episode 100! of This Week in Linux! and so as a special bonus . . . I recorded this episode LIVE on YouTube! All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! Become a Patron: - https://tuxdigital.com/patreon - https://tuxdigital.com/sponsus - https://tuxdigital.com/contribute Other Links: - https://destinationlinux.network/store - https://michaeltunnell.com Segment Index: Show Notes - https://tuxdigital.com/twinl100 00:00:51 = Sponsored by Digital Ocean ( https://do.co/dln ) 00:02:28 = Inkscape 0.92.5 Released & 1.0 RC Testing 00:07:19 = KWinFT: KDE's KWin Forked 00:15:47 = 2020: KDE's Akademy & GNOME's GUADEC 00:18:28 = fd 8.0.0 Released (find command alternative) 00:22:49 = This Week in Linux is LIVE! 00:25:03 = Destination Linux 00:27:33 = TuxDigital & TWinL on LBRY 00:28:19 = Become a Patron of TuxDigital & TWinL 00:30:07 = PulseAudio + Bluetooth on Linux 00:33:44 = Ubuntu Adds Rolling Release Kernel for AWS 00:35:48 = Pop!_OS 20.04 Beta Released 00:40:21 = Umix OS 20.04 Released 00:47:11 = Outro Linux #GNews #OpenSource