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In this episode of The Doo Doo Diva's Smells Like Money Podcast, host Suzan Chin-Taylor sits down with Quinn Petersen, Client Success Manager at RH Borden Company, to discuss the process of evaluating and implementing new technologies in the wastewater industry. This is the first part of a two-part series focused on how operators and organizations can determine if a new tool or technology is the right fit for their system. Quinn emphasizes the importance of shifting from a reactive approach to a proactive one by prioritizing high-risk problems and using data to make informed decisions. He shares real-world examples of how implementing data-driven strategies can improve system performance, reduce costs, and prevent emergencies. Key Discussion Points: - How to prioritize problems based on risk and severity - The role of data in making proactive decisions - Using technology to shift from reactive to preventive maintenance - Empowering organizations to regain control over previously overwhelmed systems - Key questions to ask when adopting new technologies: What problem does it solve? Is it a priority? How will we use the data generated? Quinn also introduces RH Borden's Rapid Assessment Tool, which uses sound waves to assess pipe conditions, helping systems transition from calendar-based cleaning to condition-based maintenance. Don't miss the next episode, where Quinn will provide a live demonstration of a cutting-edge technology that could transform your wastewater system operations. Contact Information: Kwin Peterson Account Executive at RH Borden and Company Kwin's Profile: linkedin.com/in/kwinpeterson Websites: RHborden.com Email: kwin.peterson@rhborden.com Final Thoughts: Quinn Petersen's insights offer a practical guide for wastewater professionals looking to integrate new technology smartly. By focusing on high-priority issues, leveraging data, and moving from reactive to proactive maintenance, organizations can see real, measurable improvements. As Quinn highlighted, the right tools not only enhance efficiency but also empower teams to take control of their systems. Stay tuned for the next episode, where Quinn will dive deeper into the latest innovations, providing a live demonstration of a cutting-edge technology that could transform your operations. "Don't miss it!" Subscribe and Follow: Don't forget to subscribe to the Smells Like Money Podcast for more insights and innovations in the wastewater industry. Follow us on creativeraven.com/smells-like-money-podcast for updates and more episodes. I hope you find this episode as informative and as exciting as we have. Please let us know your thoughts about the episode! Connect with Suzan Chin-Taylor, host of The DooDoo Diva's Smells Like Money Podcast: Website: www.creativeraven.com | https://thetuitgroup.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/creativeraven/ Email: raven@creativeraven.com Telephone: +1 760-217-8010 Listen and subscribe here to your favorite platform: Apple Podcast - Google Podcast - Cast Box - Overcast - Pocket Casts - YouTube - Spotify https://creativeraven.com/smells-like-money-podcast/ Subscribe to the Podcast: https://creativeraven.com/smells-like-money-podcast/ Be a guest on our show: https://calendly.com/thetuitgroup/be-a-podcast-guest Check Out my NEW Digital Marketing E-Course & Coaching Program just for Wastewater Pros: https://store.thetuitgroup.com/diy-digital-marketing-playbook-for-wastewater-pros #WastewaterManagement #TechInnovation #ProactiveMaintenance #DataDrivenDecisions #EfficiencyBoost #NewTechAdoption #WastewaterIndustry #SystemImprovement #RHBoarden #DooDooDivasPodcast #SmellsLikeMoney #InfrastructureInnovation #SmartTechnology #PodcastEpisode #QuinnPetersen
Why we think Plasma 6.1 is the desktop for people who like to mess with computers.Sponsored By:Core Contributor Membership: Take $1 a month of your membership for a lifetime!Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices!1Password Extended Access Management: 1Password Extended Access Management is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:
On Todays episode i sit down with Trilingual rap artist B Magin. We speak on culture diversity, the importance of family , how vital it is to have the proper knowledge of the music industry, working for KWIN and so much more ! B Magin IG : https://www.instagram.com/b.magin/ QuaniTEA Radio IG : https://www.instagram.com/quanitearadio/ QuaniTEA Radio Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/@quanitearadio --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/quanitea/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/quanitea/support
Tomorrow, we’re being asked to vote in two referendums, one which proposes changes to references to the family in the constitution; the other relates to carers. Jerry spoke to Fine Gael local election candidate for the Tralee Electoral Area, Sinead Donnelly, who is advocating that people vote yes in both referendums. Marian Relihan, founder member of KWIN, Kerry Women’s Interactive Network, says voters should reject both proposals. https://www.electoralcommission.ie/referendums/referendum-information/what-are-you-being-asked-to-decide-on
Try the new version of Thunderbird (it's now my email & calendar client of choice!): https://mzla.link/tb-flatpak
On this episode of Okay, Computer. Dan Nathan and Deirdre Bosa discuss the Instacart IPO (2:30), Arm Falls After Bernstein Downplays Company's AI Prospects (9:00), semi stocks (13:30), and Pinterest shares rally after executives tell Wall Street that growth is reaccelerating (14:30). Later, Dan is joined by Katie Stanton of Moxxie Ventures and Kwindla Hultman Kramer, CEO at Daily, to discuss their funder/founder origin story (26:00), about Daily (28:00), the challenge and promise of video (31:00), what separates Daily from Zoom (32:30), AI (38:30), video vertical strategies (40:30), and new innovations to be on the lookout for (44:30). View our show notes here Learn more about Ro body: ro.co/okay Email us at contact@riskreversal.com with any feedback, suggestions, or questions for us to answer on the pod and follow us @OkayComputerPod. We're on social: Follow Dan Nathan @RiskReversal on Twitter Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter Follow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMedia Subscribe to our YouTube page
On this episode of Okay, Computer. Dan Nathan and Deirdre Bosa discuss the Instacart IPO (2:30), Arm Falls After Bernstein Downplays Company's AI Prospects (9:00), semi stocks (13:30), and Pinterest shares rally after executives tell Wall Street that growth is reaccelerating (14:30). Later, Dan is joined by Katie Stanton of Moxxie Ventures and Kwindla Hultman Kramer, CEO at Daily, to discuss their funder/founder origin story (26:00), about Daily (28:00), the challenge and promise of video (31:00), what separates Daily from Zoom (32:30), AI (38:30), video vertical strategies (40:30), and new innovations to be on the lookout for (44:30). View our show notes here Learn more about Ro body: ro.co/okay Email us at contact@riskreversal.com with any feedback, suggestions, or questions for us to answer on the pod and follow us @OkayComputerPod. We're on social: Follow Dan Nathan @RiskReversal on Twitter Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter Follow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMedia Subscribe to our YouTube page
Review các phim ra rạp từ ngày 23/06/2023 VÚ EM DẠY YÊU T18 Đạo diễn: Gene Stupnitsky Diễn viên: Jennifer Lawrence, Natalie Morales, Ebon Moss-Bachrach Thể loại: Hài Không dành cho bé dưới 18!.. Red Band Trailer với Jennifer Lawrence trở lại, nóng bỏng cả mắt trong tựa phim hài-bựa-lầy nhất hè năm nay #NoHardFeelings - VÚ EM DẠY "YÊU. Duy nhất tại rạp. Dự kiến khởi chiếu 23.06.2023 QUÝ CÔNG TỬ T18 Đạo diễn: Park Hoon-jung Diễn viên: Kim Seon-Ho, Kang Tae-Ju, Go Ara, Kang-woo Kim Thể loại: Hành Động Quý Công Tử xoay quanh người đàn ông bí ẩn được biết đến với tên gọi “Quý Công Tử”. Gã đột nhiên xuất hiện trước mắt Marco, một thanh niên người Philippines mơ ước trở thành vận động viên boxing chuyên nghiệp, lang thang khắp các sàn đấu bất hợp pháp tại đây. Nhằm chi trả cho viện phí của mẹ, Marco đến Hàn Quốc để tìm người cha đã bỏ rơi hai mẹ con cậu từ lâu. Đụng độ Quý Công Tử cùng hàng loạt những con người bí hiểm trong thế giới ngầm, Marco trở thành mục tiêu duy nhất của những thế lực mang nhiều mục đích khác nhau. Cuộc truy đuổi điên cuồng bắt đầu. MẸ ƠI ĐỪNG KHÓC...T16 Đạo diễn: Lee Ho-kyung Thể loại: Phim tài liệu Rơi nước mắt cùng những câu chuyện cuối đời từ những người cha, người mẹ và những đứa trẻ đang phải kiên cường bên bờ tuyệt vọng chiến đấu với căn bệnh ung thư. Dù ngắn ngủi đến đâu, giây phút đẹp nhất cuộc đời là khi ta còn được ở bên cạnh người mình yêu thương. TÀ CHÚ CẤM T18 Đạo diễn: Sophon Sakdaphisit Diễn viên: Nittha Jirayungyurn, Sukollawat Kanaros, Penpak Sirikul Thể loại: Kinh Dị, Tâm Lý Phim kể về cặp vợ chồng Ning, Kwin và cô con gái 7 tuổi với tên gọi Ing. Vì khó khăn về tài chính, hai vợ chồng quyết định cho thuê ngôi nhà đang ở và chuyển đến một căn hộ chung cư giá rẻ để sinh sống. Sau khi những người thuê nhà chuyển đến, Ning nhận thấy chồng bắt đầu có những hành vi bất thường. Anh ta trở nên bí mật và thường biến mất khỏi căn hộ và lúc 4 giờ sáng. Kwin thậm chí còn có một hình xăm kỳ lạ ở ngực tựa như ký hiệu đặc biệt của một hội tà giáo bí ẩn. Khi hành vi của chồng ngày càng trở nên đáng lo ngại, cũng là lúc Ning nhận ra cô con gái của mình đang gặp hiểm nguy. Bí mật nào đang được che giấu trong ngôi nhà cho thuê của họ? XỨ SỞ CÁC NGUYÊN TỐ T13 Đạo diễn: Peter Sohn Diễn viên: Leah Lewis, Mamoudou Athie Thể loại: Gia đình, Hài, Hoạt Hình Xứ Sở Các Nguyên Tố từ Disney và Pixar lấy bối cảnh tại thành phố các nguyên tố, nơi lửa, nước, đất và không khí cùng chung sống với nhau. Câu chuyện xoay quanh nhân vật Ember, một cô nàng cá tính, thông minh, mạnh mẽ và đầy sức hút. Tuy nhiên, mối quan hệ của cô với Wade - một anh chàng hài hước, luôn thuận thế đẩy dòng - khiến Ember cảm thấy ngờ vực với thế giới này. Được đạo diễn bởi Peter Sohn, sản xuất bởi Denise Ream, và lồng tiếng bởi Leah Lewis (Ember) và Mamoudou Athie (Wade), phim dự kiến khởi chiếu tại rạp vào tháng 23.06.2023. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kim-thanh-duong/support
Kwindla Kramer has always been interested in building things, and his parents gave him lots of opportunity. He spent his early days learning to program on the Commodore 64, and playing old games like Loadrunner. He was super interested in the internet while in College, and in 1996, he got the opportunity to be apart of the MIT Media lab. Outside of tech, he is a quasi vegan, and enjoys the foggy beach living on the western edge of San Francisco.After exiting his last startup, Kwin took some time to figure out what he wanted to do next. During that time, he just started coding on projects, and came across WebRTC, which allowed real time communication for the web. This tech catalyzed a tipping point in his mind, and led him to build video experiments on top of it.This is the creation story of Daily.SponsorsCipherstashTreblleCAST AI FireflyTursoMemberstackLinksWebsite: https://daily.coLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwkramer/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/code-story/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Asia is a girl who books bands at Lulie Tavern, an Iconic Melbourne music venue and organises Luliepalooza, a huge celebration of local music. We sat down and talked about a bit of music and then some pressing news stories like a huge pile of boiled pasta that was recently found in the woods and a man who has fathered 550+ children.
Some Git flaws you need to know about, we reflect on 10 years of Steam on Linux, and then dive into the much anticipated Plasma 5.27.
Some Git flaws you need to know about, we reflect on 10 years of Steam on Linux, and then dive into the much anticipated Plasma 5.27.
Kwin Morris, Joe Lorenz, and Jeff Guy are members of the Stand Up For Great Lakes team. This hearty crew is working on completing Stand Up Paddleboard crossings of each of the Great Lakes. They've done Lakes Michigan, Huron, Superior, and Erie and Ontario is next. We're going to talk about what they've accomplished so far and what's next. Kwin, Joe, and Jeff have been with the team from the start and have done all four lakes together. I do want to make sure we also give credit to Joel Mueller and Nick Darga too as they were members of the Lake Michigan crossing team. Enjoy today's episode with Stand Up for Great Lakes! Learn: Alliance for the Great Lakes Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary Great Lakes Historical Shipwreck Society Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research Connect: Stand Up For Great Lakes Special offer for Paddling the Blue listeners: Visit onlineseakayaking.com and use the coupon code PTBPODCAST at checkout and you'll get 10% off up to 12 months of your subscription investment. Just another benefit of being a Paddling the Blue listener!
Plasma 5.26's standout features, Canonical flips the script on Red Hat, and why Android is leaking traffic outside VPNs.
Plasma 5.26's standout features, Canonical flips the script on Red Hat, and why Android is leaking traffic outside VPNs.
Email 1 - Help digitizing a church - Scott Hi Noah, I'm an IT guy from Brookings SD and my church wants to move to a more digital setup. This is currently a bit beyond my depth. Where would be a good place to post questions about our setup? Scott (Post Your Setup Here!)[https://notes.minddripmedia.com/kSLUHFePTz-IyVyN-40YcA#] Email 1 - Help digitizing a church - Scott Hi Noah, I'm an IT guy from Brookings SD and my church wants to move to a more digital setup. This is currently a bit beyond my depth. Where would be a good place to post questions about our setup? Scott Email 3 - Dub over video? - Jeremy What would you suggest to dub audio over pre-recorded video from a go pro? Best, Jeremy Picks (5 min) Zenmap https://nmap.org/zenmap/ Zenmap is the official Nmap Security Scanner GUI. It is a multi-platform (Linux, Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, etc.) free and open source application which aims to make Nmap easy for beginners to use while providing advanced features for experienced Nmap users. Frequently used scans can be saved as profiles to make them easy to run repeatedly. A command creator allows interactive creation of Nmap command lines. Scan results can be saved and viewed later. Saved scan results can be compared with one another to see how they differ. The results of recent scans are stored in a searchable database. Dev Term is now Available! https://liliputing.com/devterm-portable-terminal-is-now-available-with-a-raspberry-pi-cm4-for-279/ Discussion News / Main Segment (20 min) KDenlive's First Fundraiser KDE.org HEADLINE: The Kdenlive Funderaiser is Live! https://kdenlive.org/en/fund/ Today we break ground. Today we launch the first of what will be many fundraisers for specific projects. Our goal is to get funds directly into the hands of the people who make the software. The fundraiser starting today is very different. For the first time KDE is running a fundraiser for a specific project: today we have the ambitious goal of raising 15,000€ for the Kdenlive team. The funds will be given to contributors to help Kdenlive take the next step in the development of KDE's advanced, free and open video-editing application. For the record, on the cards for upcoming releases are nested timelines, a new effects panel, and improving the overall performance of Kdenlive, making it faster, more responsive, and even more fun to work with. Plasma 5.26 Beta - Bigscreen View https://liliputing.com/kde-plasma-5-26-beta-introduces-a-bigscreen-view-for-linux-apps-on-your-tv/ The new view has a 10-foot user interface, meaning everything is easily visible from your couch. And it's designed to be easy to navigate using a remote control. There are also a few applications optimized for large-screen displays including the Aura Browser, which is a web browser Plasma Bigscreen and the Plank Player for audio and video files. Plasma Bigscreen is built on top of Plasma Shell using the Qt toolkit, KWin window manager, and Wayland compositor. It also implements features from the Kirigami UI Framework, uses libCEC to handle remote control and HDMI functions, and comes with the open source Mycroft voice assistant pre-installed by default. You don't need a particularly powerful computer to get started with Plasma Bigscreen though. There are KDE Neon, postmarketOS, and Manjaro ARM images with the Bigscreen user interface available for a number of devices including low-power single-board computers like the Raspberry Pi 4, ODroid N2, Radxa Zero 2, RockPro64, and Khadas VIM line of devices. Just keep in mind that Plasma 5.26 is still consider beta software, and the Bigscreen UI is still pretty new. So don't be surprised to find some rough edges. FLIRC / RF Remote Off-gridders take energy needs into their own hands https://www.bbc.com/news/business-62351448 "We see no shortage of natural disasters in our area," says Mr Mooney, mentioning storms and wildfires as examples. "Whenever there's power outages in our community nearby, we're always fine," Ms Erickson adds. A 2,100 watt solar energy system is large enough to keep a small freezer, fridge, washing machine and laptops running, they say, adding that they hope to triple or quadruple their solar-generating capacity in the future. During the winter, the pair rely on a small gas generator when there is too much cloud around. They document their experiences on a YouTube channel called This Off Grid Life (https://www.youtube.com/c/ThisOffGridLife). -- 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/303) 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)
We get the details behind Thunderbird acquiring K-9 Mail, share the best new features of Plasma 5.25, check-in on Ubuntu's RISC-V development status, and discuss Photoshop coming to Linux via the web.
We get the details behind Thunderbird acquiring K-9 Mail, share the best new features of Plasma 5.25, check-in on Ubuntu's RISC-V development status, and discuss Photoshop coming to Linux via the web.
What's coming next for the Linux desktop, and some exclusive news from System76. Plus, we try out Element's new voice messages and share our thoughts.
What's coming next for the Linux desktop, and some exclusive news from System76. Plus, we try out Element's new voice messages and share our thoughts.
What's coming next for the Linux desktop, and some exclusive news from System76. Plus, we try out Element's new voice messages and share our thoughts.
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Kwin finds his way and the gang goes to....heaven? Thank you all for listening! We're on Discord! Join us at https://discord.gg/EuwNdbU! You also can write us on Twitter @HaplessHeroes or drop us an e-mail at haplessheroes@gmail.com. As always, a BIG thanks to Tim @ https://tabletopaudio.com for providing the SFX and ambiences used in this episode and beyond!
Kenny from Altispeed joins us to discuss applying the network concepts covered in episodes 226 and 231. Amazon is rolling out a new feature that's sharing your internet, and it's on by default. OBS, KDE, and Firefox all have new versions plus our gadgets and picks! -- During The Show -- 01:20 Controlling Multiple Computers? - Ryan HDMI Matrix switcher for monitors + KVM switch for keyboard, mouse, etc hardware based (good for locked down computer) depending on switchers used could accommodate more than 2 computers Synergy Website (https://symless.com/synergy) Synergy Github (https://github.com/symless/synergy-core) Barrier (https://github.com/debauchee/barrier) Open Source + free version of synergy Thunderbolt Docks Dell WD19TB Thunderbolt Dock (https://www.dell.com/en-us/work/shop/dell-thunderbolt-dock-wd19tb/apd/210-arik/pc-accessories) Recommended in ANS 215 Logitech MX Series Keyboard and Mouse 13:40 User responds to user from 234 - Amit Boom GitHub (https://github.com/snapshotmanager/boom) Red Hat Blog (https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/boom-booting-rhel-lvm-snapshots) Also supports BTRFS Snapshot Manager Doc (https://github.com/snapshotmanager/snapshot-boot-docs/blob/main/docs/design/snapshot-boot-design.pdf) Snapshot Manager + Boom Github (https://github.com/snapshotmanager/boom) 15:30 Linux, security and privacy? - Dan Got a FLOSS MRP solution? Write In! 16:25 Pick of the Week Qzind GitHub (https://github.com/qzind/tray/) Browser plugin for sending documents and raw commands to a printer or attached device 18:50 Gadget of the Week Zebra ZD420 Series (https://www.zebra.com/us/en/products/printers/desktop/zd420-series-desktop-printers.html) Native Linux support Support for external label cutter 22:00 Amazon Sidewalk/Neighbors Amazon Mass Wireless Sharing Guardian Article (https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/jun/01/amazon-us-customers-given-one-week-to-opt-out-of-mass-wireless-sharing) Privacy, Security & OSINT Show Episode 197 (https://soundcloud.com/user-98066669/197-big-sur-update-amazon-sidewalk) ArsTechnica Article (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/05/amazon-devices-will-soon-automatically-share-your-internet-with-neighbors/) Capped at 80 Kbps/ 500M 28:50 Plamsa 5.22.0 Plasma Blog Post (https://kde.org/announcements/plasma/5/5.22.0/) Clean up and re-factoring of code Adaptive Transparency - Maximizing a window causes the panel and panel widgets to turn opaque Transition to Plasma System Monitor from KsysGuard Plasma Wayland now supports Activities System Settings opens to "Speed Dial" providing easy access to commonly used settings Improved accessibility and keyboard navigation Variable refresh rate on wayland External Graphics card support in Kwin (picks up eGPUs with out a reboot) 29:45 Purism Shipping Purism Post (https://puri.sm/posts/manufacturing-the-librem-5-usa-phone-in-the-united-states-of-america/) Purism Shop (https://shop.puri.sm/shop/librem-5-usa/) $1999 Fraction of the specs and apps 36:55 Matrix / Element Spaces allows you to have one consistent communication platform but also focus Matrix adds Thunderbird integration via Libpurple Not perfect but functional now and only getting better NeoChat has updates 43:50 Firefox Release Cleaned Up interface Streamlined Menus Updated Prompts New Tab Design Fewer Interruptions Cohesive Calmer Visuals Firefox 89 implements Total Coookie Protection in Private Browsing 46:00 OBS Studio Release OBS Studio 27.0 is out! Added visibility transitions Added service integration Added Wayland & Pipewire Support (Thank You George Stavracas) Added Track Matte mode to stinger transitions Added a virtual camera toggle to the system tray menu Automatic rotation on Video Capture Devices can now be disabled Added auto reset option to v4L2 source 47:25 Kenny Schmidt Logitech MX Series Practical Application of Networking Segments TP Link 5 port managed switch (https://www.amazon.com/TP-LINK-TL-SG105E-5-Port-Gigabit-Version/dp/B00N0OHEMA) -- 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/235) 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)
Kwin is confronted with a difficult situation while the situation in Ardwall looks more dire by the minute... Thank you all for listening! We're on Discord! Join us at https://discord.gg/EuwNdbU! You also can write us on Twitter @HaplessHeroes or drop us an e-mail at haplessheroes@gmail.com. As always, a BIG thanks to Tim @ https://tabletopaudio.com for providing the SFX and ambiences used in this episode and beyond!
Tune into another insightful episode of #BlowinSmokePodcast featuring 209's very own music enthusiast, A&R and program director for the valley's hottest radio station 97.7/98.3 KWIN, Danial 'Jiggy' Diaz. Hearing about the early days of what got him into the music business, touching on mentors and what it takes to be in the life of the radio industry. Finishing with what calculated moves are next for this upcoming year... with a whole lotta smoke
Impressive updates for some beloved open source projects, and AlmaLinux—a leading CentOS alternative—is born. Plus Google's surprise for Chromium users, and we go hands-on with Podman's docker-compose support.
Impressive updates for some beloved open source projects, and AlmaLinux—a leading CentOS alternative—is born. Plus Google's surprise for Chromium users, and we go hands-on with Podman's docker-compose support.
Impressive updates for some beloved open source projects, and AlmaLinux—a leading CentOS alternative—is born. Plus Google's surprise for Chromium users, and we go hands-on with Podman's docker-compose support.
Boris and Kwin enact some shenanigans while Jha'rell isn't looking... Thank you all for listening! We're on Discord! Join us at https://discord.gg/EuwNdbU! You also can write us on Twitter @HaplessHeroes or drop us an e-mail at haplessheroes@gmail.com. As always, a BIG thanks to Tim @ tabletopaudio.com and the folks at Battlebards for providing the SFX and ambiences used in this episode and beyond!
Listen to the #BlowinSmokePodcast with JG & J'Jonah as they bring on their final guest of season 4 featuring the valley's dopest radio broadcaster @Laniqonair. Tapping on her ventures on becoming a radio personality for 97.7/98.3 KWIN; while hearing details on the journey it took to create something as genuine as the 'W.O.W foundation'...with whole lotta smoke
Kwin continues to hack the high seas to haul our heroes to Highrock. Thank you all for listening! We're on Discord! Join us at https://discord.gg/EuwNdbU! You also can write us on Twitter @HaplessHeroes or drop us an e-mail at haplessheroes@gmail.com. As always, a BIG thanks to Tim @ tabletopaudio.com and the folks at Battlebards for providing the SFX and ambiences used in this episode and beyond!
As if 2020 wasn’t scary enough, the BakChat duo swoops in with an extra dose of BOO! Kwin surprises Bryan with a pop quiz of Lady Gaga’s 6th studio album release, CHROMATICA. Bryan proves himself worthy as a true Dreamologist with an on the spot analysis of Kwin’s recurring dream. Kwin gives an update on … Continue reading "S2 “Spooky Halloween Spectacular!”"
On this JBWFLI episode of BaKChat, Bry and Kwin discuss Bryan’s Category 5 birthday blowjob and Kwin’s growing waistline and how they’re transitioning from Mimosas to Mumus! The “It’s In The Stars” theme preludes into Halloween festivities with each sign being categorized as either a naughty trick or a tasty treat. Follow us on Insta! … Continue reading "S2 “Lick My Rat Hole!”"
Pour cette pause estivale, nous avons mis la main sur une pépite : un remix issu du CD 2 titres de la version "20e anniversaire" de Starmania. Sur la face B du titre "Nos Planètes se séparent", figurait cet étonnant remix de la chanson "Ce soir on danse au Naziland", interprété par Frank Sherbourne et Kwin.Dans ce mini-épisode, avec Ambre, Amélie, Virginie et Julien, on vous fait découvrir en intégralité ce titre rare... et on y réagit ! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The latest Ubuntu LTS is here, but does it live up to the hype? And how practical are the new ZFS features? We dig into the performance, security, and stability of Focal Fossa. Plus our thoughts on the new KWin fork, if Bleachbit is safe, and a quick Fedora update. Special Guests: Brent Gervais and Drew DeVore.
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
A KDE developer releases a drop-in replacement for KWin, Ubuntu shifts its kernel release to a rolling model for some AWS-hosted virtual machines, Google unveils a gRPC framework for Kotlin, and the Paranoid Android ROM returns with an Android 10 build.
Okay, so you're probably sick of hearing about how special each new episode is, but it's just always true! In this episode, Jack and Jasinda interview Kwin Morris live in their studio. In an effort to raise awareness about and money for the preservation of the Great Lakes which surround Michigan, Kwin and his childhood friends have paddled across Lakes Michigan and Huron, and this July they will attempt their longest, most dangerous, and most ambitious paddle yet: Lake Superior. As one of the founders of the non-profit organization Stand Up For Great Lakes, Kwin is an experienced stand up paddleboarder, middle school science teacher, adventurer, adrenaline junkie, and seriously fit human being, Kwin has been a huge inspiration and influencer in the Wilder world. Don't miss this fun, inspiring, and informative interview.
In this episode, we clear up the myth about scrub of death, look at Wayland and Weston on FreeBSD, Intel QuickAssist is here, and we check out OpenSMTP on OpenBSD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines Matt Ahrens answers questions about the “Scrub of Death” In working on the breakdown of that ZFS article last week, Matt Ahrens contacted me and provided some answers he has given to questions in the past, allowing me to answer them using HIS exact words. “ZFS has an operation, called SCRUB, that is used to check all data in the pool and recover any data that is incorrect. However, if a bug which make errors on the pool persist (for example, a system with bad non-ecc RAM) then SCRUB can cause damage to a pool instead of recover it. I heard it called the “SCRUB of death” somewhere. Therefore, as far as I understand, using SCRUB without ECC memory is dangerous.” > I don't believe that is accurate. What is the proposed mechanism by which scrub can corrupt a lot of data, with non-ECC memory? > ZFS repairs bad data by writing known good data to the bad location on disk. The checksum of the data has to verify correctly for it to be considered "good". An undetected memory error could change the in-memory checksum or data, causing ZFS to incorrectly think that the data on disk doesn't match the checksum. In that case, ZFS would attempt to repair the data by first re-reading the same offset on disk, and then reading from any other available copies of the data (e.g. mirrors, ditto blocks, or RAIDZ reconstruction). If any of these attempts results in data that matches the checksum, then the data will be written on top of the (supposed) bad data. If the data was actually good, then overwriting it with the same good data doesn't hurt anything. > Let's look at what will happen with 3 types of errors with non-ECC memory: > 1. Rare, random errors (e.g. particle strikes - say, less than one error per GB per second). If ZFS finds data that matches the checksum, then we know that we have the correct data (at least at that point in time, with probability 1-1/2^256). If there are a lot of memory errors happening at a high rate, or if the in-memory checksum was corrupt, then ZFS won't be able to find a good copy of the data , so it won't do a repair write. It's possible that the correctly-checksummed data is later corrupted in memory, before the repair write. However, the window of vulnerability is very very small - on the order of milliseconds between when the checksum is verified, and when the write to disk completes. It is implausible that this tiny window of memory vulnerability would be hit repeatedly. > 2. Memory that pretty much never does the right thing. (e.g. huge rate of particle strikes, all memory always reads 0, etc). In this case, critical parts of kernel memory (e.g. instructions) will be immediately corrupted, causing the system to panic and not be able to boot again. > 3. One or a few memory locations have "stuck bits", which always read 0 (or always read 1). This is the scenario discussed in the message which (I believe) originally started the "Scrub of Death" myth: https://forums.freenas.org/index.php?threads/ecc-vs-non-ecc-ram-and-zfs.15449/ This assumes that we read in some data from disk to a memory location with a stuck bit, "correct" that same bad memory location by overwriting the memory with the correct data, and then we write the bad memory location to disk. However, ZFS doesn't do that. (It seems the author thinks that ZFS uses parity, which it only does when using RAID-Z. Even with RAID-Z, we also verify the checksum, and we don't overwrite the bad memory location.) > Here's what ZFS will actually do in this scenario: If ZFS reads data from disk into a memory location with a stuck bit, it will detect a checksum mismatch and try to find a good copy of the data to repair the "bad" disk. ZFS will allocate a new, different memory location to read a 2nd copy of the data, e.g. from the other side of a mirror (this happens near the end of dslscanscrub_cb()). If the new memory location also has a stuck bit, then its checksum will also fail, so we won't use it to repair the "bad" disk. If the checksum of the 2nd copy of the data is correct, then we will write it to the "bad" disk. This write is unnecessary, because the "bad" disk is not really bad, but it is overwriting the good data with the same good data. > I believe that this misunderstanding stems from the idea that ZFS fixes bad data by overwriting it in place with good data. In reality, ZFS overwrites the location on disk, using a different memory location for each read from disk. The "Scrub of Death" myth assumes that ZFS overwrites the location in memory, which it doesn't do. > In summary, there's no plausible scenario where ZFS would amplify a small number of memory errors, causing a "scrub of death". Additionally, compared to other filesystems, ZFS checksums provide some additional protection against bad memory. “Is it true that ZFS verifies the checksum of every block on every read from disk?” > Yes “And if that block is incorrect, that ZFS will repair it?” > Yes “If yes, is it possible set options or flag for change that behavior? For example, I would like for ZFS to verify checksums during any read, but not change anything and only report about issues if it appears. Is it possible?” > There isn't any built-in flag for doing that. It wouldn't be hard to add one though. If you just wanted to verify data, without attempting to correct it, you could read or scan the data with the pool was imported read-only “If using a mirror, when a file is read, is it fully read and verified from both sides of the mirror?” > No, for performance purposes, each block is read from only one side of the mirror (assuming there is no checksum error). “What is the difference between a scrub and copying every file to /dev/null?” > That won't check all copies of the file (e.g. it won't check both sides of the mirror). *** Wayland, and Weston, and FreeBSD - Oh My! (https://euroquis.nl/bobulate/?p=1617) KDE's CI system for FreeBSD (that is, what upstream runs to continuously test KDE git code on the FreeBSD platform) is missing some bits and failing some tests because of Wayland. Or rather, because FreeBSD now has Wayland, but not Qt5-Wayland, and no Weston either (the reference implementation of a Wayland compositor). Today I went hunting for the bits and pieces needed to make that happen. Fortunately, all the heavy lifting has already been done: there is a Weston port prepared and there was a Qt5-Wayland port well-hidden in the Area51 plasma5/ branch. I have taken the liberty of pulling them into the Area51 repository as branch qtwayland. That way we can nudge Weston forward, and/or push Qt5-Wayland in separately. Nicest from a testing perspective is probably doing both at the same time. I picked a random “Hello World” Wayland tutorial and also built a minimal Qt program (using QMessageBox::question, my favorite function to hate right now, because of its i18n characteristics). Then, setting XDGRUNTIMEDIR to /tmp/xdg, I could start Weston (as an X11 client), wayland-hello (as a Wayland client, displaying in Weston) and qt-hello (as either an X11 client, or as a Wayland client). So this gives users of Area51 (while shuffling branches, granted) a modern desktop and modern display capabilities. Oh my! It will take a few days for this to trickle up and/or down so that the CI can benefit and we can make sure that KWin's tests all work on FreeBSD, but it's another good step towards tight CI and another small step towards KDE Plasma 5 on the desktop on FreeBSD. pkgsrcCon 2017 report (https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/pkgsrccon_2017_report) This years pkgsrcCon returned to London once again. It was last held in London back in 2014. The 2014 con was the first pkgsrcCon I attended, I had been working on Darwin/PowerPC fixes for some months and presented on the progress I'd made with a 12" G4 PowerBook. I took away a G4 Mac Mini that day to help spare the PowerBook for use and dedicate a machine for build and testing. The offer of PowerPC hardware donations was repeated at this years con, thanks to jperkin@ who showed up with a backpack full of Mac Minis (more on that later). Since 2014 we have held cons in Berlin (2015) & Krakow (2016). In Krakow we had talks about a wide range of projects over 2 days, from Haiku Ports to Common Lisp to midipix (building native PE binaries for Windows) and back to the BSDs. I was very pleased to continue the theme of a diverse program this year. Aside from pkgsrc and NetBSD, we had talks about FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Slackware Linux, and Plan 9. Things began with a pub gathering on the Friday for the pre-con social, we hung out and chatted till almost midnight on a wide range of topics, such as supporting a system using NFS on MS-DOS, the origins of pdksh, corporate IT, culture and many other topics. On parting I was asked about the starting time on Saturday as there was some conflicting information. I learnt that the registration email had stated a later start than I had scheduled for & advertised on the website, by 30 minutes. Lesson learnt: register for your own event! Not a problem, I still needed to setup a webpage for the live video stream, I could do both when I got back. With some trimming here and there I had a new schedule, I posted that to the pkgsrcCon website and moved to trying to setup a basic web page which contained a snippet of javascript to play a live video stream from Scale Engine. 2+ hours later, it was pointed out that the XSS protection headers on pkgsrc.org breaks the functionality. Thanks to jmcneill@ for debugging and providing a working page. Saturday started off with Giovanni Bechis speaking about pledge in OpenBSD and adding support to various packages in their ports tree, alnsn@ then spoke about installing packages from a repo hosted on the Tor network. After a quick coffee break we were back to hear Charles Forsyth speak about how Plan 9 and Inferno dealt with portability, building software and the problem which are avoided by the environment there. This was followed by a very energetic rant by David Spencer from the Slackbuilds project on packaging 3rd party software. Slackbuilds is a packaging system for Slackware Linux, which was inspired by FreeBSD ports. For the first slot after lunch, agc@ gave a talk on the early history of pkgsrc followed by Thomas Merkel on using vagrant to test pkgsrc changes with ease, locally, using vagrant. khorben@ covered his work on adding security to pkgsrc and bsiegert@ covered the benefits of performing our bulk builds in the cloud and the challenges we currently face. My talk was about some topics and ideas which had inspired me or caught my attention, and how it could maybe apply to my work.The title of the talk was taken from the name of Andrew Weatherall's Saint Etienne remix, possibly referring to two different styles of track (dub & vocal) merged into one or something else. I meant it in terms of applicability of thoughts and ideas. After me, agc@ gave a second talk on the evolution of the Netflix Open Connect appliance which runs FreeBSD and Vsevolod Stakhov wrapped up the day with a talk about the technical implementation details of the successor to pkgtools in FreeBSD, called pkg, and how it could be of benefit for pkgsrc. For day 2 we gathered for a hack day at the London Hack Space. I had burn't some some CD of the most recent macppc builds of NetBSD 8.0BETA and -current to install and upgrade Mac Minis. I setup the donated G4 minis for everyone in a dual-boot configuration and moved on to taking apart my MacBook Air to inspect the wifi adapter as I wanted to replace it with something which works on FreeBSD. It was not clear from the ifixit teardown photos of cards size, it seemed like a normal mini-PCIe card but it turned out to be far smaller. Thomas had also had the same card in his and we are not alone. Thomas has started putting together a driver for the Broadcom card, the project is still in its early days and lacks support for encrypted networks but hopefully it will appear on review.freebsd.org in the future. weidi@ worked on fixing SunOS bugs in various packages and later in the night we setup a NetBSD/macppc bulk build environment together on his Mac Mini. Thomas setup an OpenGrock instance to index the source code of all the software available for packaging in pkgsrc. This helps make the evaluation of changes easier and the scope of impact a little quicker without having to run through a potentially lengthy bulk build with a change in mind to realise the impact. bsiegert@ cleared his ticket and email backlog for pkgsrc and alnsn@ got NetBSD/evbmips64-eb booting on his EdgeRouter Lite. On Monday we reconvened at the Hack Space again and worked some more. I started putting together the talks page with the details from Saturday and the the slides which I had received, in preparation for the videos which would come later in the week. By 3pm pkgsrcCon was over. I was pretty exhausted but really pleased to have had a few days of techie fun. Many thanks to The NetBSD Foundation for purchasing a camera to use for streaming the event and a speedy response all round by the board. The Open Source Specialist Group at BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT and the London Hack Space for hosting us. Scale Engine for providing streaming facility. weidi@ for hosting the recorded videos. Allan Jude for pointers, Jared McNeill for debugging, NYCBUG and Patrick McEvoy for tips on streaming, the attendees and speakers. This year we had speakers from USA, Italy, Germany and London E2. Looking forward to pkgsrcCon 2018! The videos and slides are available here (http://www.pkgsrc.org/pkgsrcCon/2017/talks.html) and the Internet Archive (http://archive.org/details/pkgsrcCon-2017). News Roundup QuickAssist Driver for FreeBSD is here and pfSense Support Coming (https://www.servethehome.com/quickassist-driver-freebsd-pfsupport-coming/) This week we have something that STH readers will be excited about. Before I started writing for STH, I was a reader and had been longing for QuickAssist support ever since STH's first Rangeley article over three and a half years ago. It was clear from the get-go that Rangeley was going to be the preeminent firewall appliance platform of its day. The scope of products that were impacted by the Intel Atom C2000 series bug showed us it was indeed. For my personal firewalls, I use pfSense on that Rangeley platform so I have been waiting to use QuickAssist with my hardware for almost an entire product generation. + New Hardware and QuickAssist Incoming to pfSense (Finally) pfSense (and a few other firewalls) are based on FreeBSD. FreeBSD tends to lag driver support behind mainstream Linux but it is popular for embedded security appliances. While STH is the only site to have done QuickAssist benchmarks for OpenSSL and IPSec VPNs pre-Skylake, we expect more platforms to use it now that the new Intel Xeon Scalable Processor Family is out. With the Xeon Scalable platforms, the “Lewisburg” PCH has QuickAssist options of up to 100Gbps, or 2.5x faster than the previous generation add-in cards we tested (40Gbps.) We now have more and better hardware for QAT, but we were still devoid of a viable FreeBSD QAT driver from Intel. That has changed. Our Intel Xeon Scalable Processor Family (Skylake-SP) Launch Coverage Central has been the focus of the STH team's attention this week. There was another important update from Intel that got buried, a publicly available Intel QuickAssist driver for FreeBSD. You can find the driver on 01.org here dated July 12, 2017. Drivers are great, but we still need support to be enabled in the OS and at the application layer. Patrick forwarded me this tweet from Jim Thompson (lead at Netgate the company behind pfSense): The Netgate team has been a key company pushing QuickAssist appliances in the market, usually based on Linux. To see that QAT is coming to FreeBSD and that they were working to integrate into “pfSense soon” is more than welcome. For STH readers, get ready. It appears to be actually and finally happening. QuickAssist on FreeBSD and pfSense OpenBSD on the Huawei MateBook X (https://jcs.org/2017/07/14/matebook) The Huawei MateBook X is a high-quality 13" ultra-thin laptop with a fanless Core i5 processor. It is obviously biting the design of the Apple 12" MacBook, but it does have some notable improvements such as a slightly larger screen, a more usable keyboard with adequate key travel, and 2 USB-C ports. It also uses more standard PC components than the MacBook, such as a PS/2-connected keyboard, removable m.2 WiFi card, etc., so its OpenBSD compatibility is quite good. In contrast to the Xiaomi Mi Air, the MateBook is actually sold (2) in the US and comes with a full warranty and much higher build quality (though at twice the price). It is offered in the US in a "space gray" color for the Core i5 model and a gold color for the Core i7. The fanless Core i5 processor feels snappy and doesn't get warm during normal usage on OpenBSD. Doing a make -j4 build at full CPU speed does cause the laptop to get warm, though the palmrest maintains a usable temperature. The chassis is all aluminum and has excellent rigidity in the keyboard area. The 13.0" 2160x1440 glossy IPS "Gorilla glass" screen has a very small bezel and its hinge is properly weighted to allow opening the lid with one hand. There is no wobble in the screen when open, even when jostling the desk that the laptop sits on. It has a reported brightness of 350 nits. I did not experience any of the UEFI boot variable problems that I did with the Xiaomi, and the MateBook booted quickly into OpenBSD after re-initializing the GPT table during installation. OpenSMTPD under OpenBSD with SSL/VirtualUsers/Dovecot (https://blog.cagedmonster.net/opensmtpd-under-openbsd-with-ssl-virtualusers-dovecot/) During the 2013 AsiaBSDCon, the team of OpenBSD presented its mail solution named OpenSMTPD. Developed by the OpenBSD team, we find the so much appreciated philosophy of its developers : security, simplicity / clarity and advanced features. Basic configuration : OpenSMTPD is installed by default, we can immediately start with a simple configuration. > We listen on our interfaces, we specify the path of our aliases file so we can manage redirections. > Mails will be delivered for the domain cagedmonster.net to mbox (the local users mailbox), same for the aliases. > Finally, we accept to relay local mails exclusively. > We can now enable smtpd at system startup and start the daemon. Advanced configuration including TLS : You can use SSL with : A self-signed certificate (which will not be trusted) or a certificate generated by a trusted authority. LetsEncrypt uses Certbot to generated your certificate. You can check this page for further informations. Let's focus on the first. Generation of the certificate : We fix the permissions : We edit the config file : > We have a mail server with SSL, it's time to configure our IMAP server, Dovecot, and manage the creation of virtual users. Dovecot setup, and creation of Virtual Users : We will use the package system of OpenBSD, so please check the configuration of your /etc/pkg.conf file. Enable the service at system startup : Setup the Virtual Users structure : Adding the passwd table for smtpd : Modification of the OpenSMTPD configuration : We declare the files used for our Virtual Accounts, we include SSL, and we configure mails delivery via the Dovecot lmtp socket. We'll create our user lina@cagedmonster.net and set its password. Configure SSL Configure dovecot.conf Configure mail.con Configure login.conf : Make sure that the value of openfiles-cur in /etc/login.conf is equal or superior of 1000 ! Starting Dovecot *** OpenSMTPD and Dovecot under OpenBSD with MySQL support and SPAMD (https://blog.cagedmonster.net/opensmtpd-and-dovecot-under-openbsd-with-mysql-support-and-spamd/) This article is the continuation of my previous tutorial OpenSMTPD under OpenBSD with SSL/VirtualUsers/Dovecot. We'll use the same configuration and add some features so we can : Use our domains, aliases, virtual users with a MySQL database (MariaDB under OpenBSD). Deploy SPAMD with OpenSMTPD for a strong antispam solution. + Setup of the MySQL support for OpenSMTPD & Dovecot + We create our SQL database named « smtpd » + We create our SQL user « opensmtpd » we give him the privileges on our SQL database and we set its password + We create the structure of our SQL database + We generate our password with Blowfish (remember it's OpenBSD !) for our users + We create our tables and we include our datas + We push everything to our database + Time to configure OpenSMTPD + We create our mysql.conf file and configure it + Configuration of Dovecot.conf + Configuration of auth-sql.conf.ext + Configuration of dovecot-sql.conf.ext + Restart our services OpenSMTPD & SPAMD : SPAMD is a service simulating a fake SMTP server and relying on strict compliance with RFC to determine whether the server delivering a mail is a spammer or not. + Configuration of SPAMD : + Enable SPAMD & SPAMLOGD at system startup : + Configuration of SPAMD flags + Configuration of PacketFilter + Configuration of SPAMD + Start SPAMD & SPAMLOGD Running a TOR relay on FreeBSD (https://networkingbsdblog.wordpress.com/2017/07/14/freebsd-tor-relay-using-priveledge-seperation/) There are 2 main steps to getting a TOR relay working on FreeBSD: Installing and configuring Tor Using an edge router to do port translation In my case I wanted TOR to run it's services on ports 80 and 443 but any port under 1024 requires root access in UNIX systems. +So I used port mapping on my router to map the ports. +Begin by installing TOR and ARM from: /usr/ports/security/tor/ /usr/ports/security/arm/ Arm is the Anonymizing Relay Monitor: https://www.torproject.org/projects/arm.html.en It provides useful monitoring graph and can be used to configure the torrc file. Next step edit the torrc file (see Blog article for the edit) It is handy to add the following lines to /etc/services so you can more easily modify your pf configuration. torproxy 9050/tcp #torsocks torOR 9090/tcp #torOR torDIR 9099/tcp #torDIR To allow TOR services my pf.conf has the following lines: # interfaces lan_if=”re0″ wifi_if=”wlan0″ interfaces=”{wlan0,re0}” tcp_services = “{ ssh torproxy torOR torDIR }” # options set block-policy drop set loginterface $lan_if # pass on lo set skip on lo scrub in on $lan_if all fragment reassemble # NAT nat on $lan_if from $wifi_if:network to !($lan_if) -> ($lan_if) block all antispoof for $interfaces #In NAT pass in log on $wifi_if inet pass out all keep state #ICMP pass out log inet proto icmp from any to any keep state pass in log quick inet proto icmp from any to any keep state #SSH pass in inet proto tcp to $lan_if port ssh pass in inet proto tcp to $wifi_if port ssh #TCP Services on Server pass in inet proto tcp to $interfaces port $tcp_services keep state The finally part is mapping the ports as follows: TOR directory port: LANIP:9099 —> WANIP:80 TOR router port: LANIP:9090 —-> WANIP:443 Now enable TOR: $ sudo echo “tor_enable=YES” >> /etc/rc.conf Start TOR: $ sudo service tor start *** Beastie Bits OpenBSD as a “Desktop” (Laptop) (http://unixseclab.com/index.php/2017/06/12/openbsd-as-a-desktop-laptop/) Sascha Wildner has updated ACPICA in DragonFly to Intel's version 20170629 (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2017-July/625997.html) Dport, Rust, and updates for DragonFlyBSD (https://www.dragonflydigest.com/2017/07/18/19991.html) OPNsense 17.7 RC1 released (https://opnsense.org/opnsense-17-7-rc1/) Unix's mysterious && and || (http://www.networkworld.com/article/3205148/linux/unix-s-mysterious-andand-and.html#tk.rss_unixasasecondlanguage) The Commute Deck : A Homebrew Unix terminal for tight places (http://boingboing.net/2017/06/16/cyberspace-is-everting.html) FreeBSD 11.1-RC3 now available (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2017-July/087407.html) Installing DragonFlyBSD with ORCA when you're totally blind (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2017-July/313528.html) Who says FreeBSD can't look good (http://imgur.com/gallery/dc1pu) Pratik Vyas adds the ability to do paused VM migrations for VMM (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170716160129) Feedback/Questions Hrvoje - OpenBSD MP Networking (http://dpaste.com/0EXV173#wrap) Goran - debuggers (http://dpaste.com/1N853NG#wrap) Abhinav - man-k (http://dpaste.com/1JXQY5E#wrap) Liam - university setup (http://dpaste.com/01ERMEQ#wrap)
Hello everyone and welcome to another mediocre episode of The Jupiter Boys. First, Gym wants to know what Kwin's main dealbreakers are when associating with the fairer sex. The Quinn wants to know the best book to film adaptations and if there are any movies that actually overpower the books. Then we talk about how BRob wants to have us on the Random Ramblings podcast (which is an actual, professional podcast) and how neither of us have any idea why. Please support Rob's friend on his GoFundMe page here: https://t.co/XFsWDMA4za And check out the Random Ramblings Podcast here: https://t.co/Zat1sYxAAM Jupiter Boys intro for this week was recorded by Cyannide of Little Geek Lost: www.littlegeeklost.com Special thanks to Christo Graham for the use of our theme music: http://christograham.bandcamp.com Don't forget to get in touch with us using the hashtag #cherrytimbit Email us at thejupiterboys@gmail.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/thejupiterboys Facebook: http://facebook.com/jupiterboyz Please consider giving us a rating and/or review wherever you listen to podcasts. That'd be rad as fuck.
We expose a filthy lie! Plus, your letters, narration, internet trends, ice cream & Mike on TV.