Family of free and open-source software operating systems based on the Linux kernel
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I switched to Linux Desktop from Mac/Windows. I use it as a daily driver now. Here are the reasons why I finally made the switch. I shared a lot of the software I use for ALL of my needs. If you're a live streamer, developer, or gamer, and you're considering switching, hopefully this video will help with your decision to switch or not.---------------------------------------------------
Apple's software is going rotten, while Linux sneaks up as the better Mac. Linus grumbles through Git's 20th birthday, and we spot a hardware window Linux better not slam shut.Sponsored By: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. ConfigCat Feature Flags: Manage features and change your software configuration using ConfigCat feature flags, without the need to re-deploy code. Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:
Az EU OS projekt annyira komolyan veszi a szuverenitást, hogy mindjárt az amerikai Red Hat-féle Fedorára alapoz. A cél: egy réteges, testre szabható, mindenki által szerethető rendszer, amit majd a közszféra úgy használ, mintha ez lenne az új Windows. Mert ha valamire eddig is mindig jól reagáltak a hivatalok, az egy új, de bonyolult felület. Az adásban kiveséztük, miért tűnik ez az egész inkább digitális fanfictionnek, mint valódi stratégiának.
Justin serves as Head of Product at Sidero Labs. His career includes contributions to Oscar-winning films, the Disney+ streaming platform, and Amazon EKS. In his free time, Justin enjoys building modern-retro computers and watching Moana. He is the co-host of the FAFO.FM podcast with Autumn Nash. In this Episode he talks to Scott about his love for Linux and the Linux Desktop
More from The Lunduke Journal: https://lunduke.com/ This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lunduke.substack.com/subscribe
Tim Flink, a Senior Quality Engineer from Red Hat joins us to talk about AI on Fedora. This week Noah and Steve talk about their struggles with the Linux Desktop. -- During The Show -- 02:30 Helping a Non-techy friend - Sleuth The plan Locked down second hand Android device Ting Flex plan Tracar (https://www.traccar.org/) JMP.Chat Sim Plan Mint Mobile Steer people away from sms/calls Matrix Telegram etc 08:47 News Wire Calibre 7.21 - calibre-ebook.com (https://download.calibre-ebook.com/7.21.0/) Cmake 3.31 - cmake.org (https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/release/3.31.html) Curl 8.11 - curl.se (https://curl.se/ch/) Scraperr 1.0 - github.com (https://github.com/jaypyles/Scraperr) LXQT 2.1 - lxqt-project.org (https://lxqt-project.org/release/2024/11/05/release-lxqt-2-1-0/) Ubuntu Touch OTA-6 - ubports.com (https://ubports.com/en/blog/ubports-news-1/post/ubuntu-touch-ota-6-focal-release-3942) Debian 12.8 - debian.org (https://www.debian.org/News/2024/20241109) Torvalds 2.6% Performance Patch - theregister.com (https://www.theregister.com/2024/11/06/torvalds_patch_linux_performance/) 3800% Performance Improvement - phoronix.com (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Intel-Linux-3888.9-Performance) CRON#TRAP Malware - thehackernews.com (https://thehackernews.com/2024/11/new-crontrap-malware-infects-windows-by.html) AMD OLMo LLM - computerworld.com (https://www.computerworld.com/article/3600762/amd-rolls-out-open-source-olmo-llm-to-compete-with-ai-giants.html) 09:58 Tim Flink - Senior Quality Engineer - Red Hat Where should you start with AI? PyTorch (https://pytorch.org/) Orders of magnitude faster on a GPU VRAM is the biggest factor How is Fedora using AI? OpenQA (https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/OpenQA) RocM and PyTorch Efforts around packaging Why are you focusing on RocM? Where is a good place to help out? AI/ML SIG (https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SIGs/AI-ML) Containers coming What does open source mean to you? 22:28 Kubuntu and Docker Broken - Michael Fisher Docker Compose Pastebin (https://pastebin.com/EHa4sHGQ) Docker Logs Pastebin (https://pastebin.com/UWE7Ss1a) Docker internal DNS having issues 24:36 What's the deal with Linux Desktop Environments? Steve's workflow Static vs Dynamic approach How close can I get to immutable with flatpaks Software KVM Synergy (proprietary) Barrior (abandoned) Input Leap (https://github.com/input-leap/input-leap) 3 Monitors, 2 horizontal and 1 vertical KDE hates Steve NVIDIA drivers Why is it so hard to put software in hardware? Ubuntu won't say its up to date because of Ubuntu Pro Can't install LibreOffice on Ubuntu because of Snap All operating systems have issues 45:20 MacOS vs EndlessOS vs Windows 10 Mac Book No working battery Disposable 3+ Hours just to install the OS ThinkPad with EndlessOS Flatpak for Office 365 Windows Can't upgrade to windows 11 Windows 11 requires online account Windows 11 requires TPM chip 2 People both chose the EndlessOS Endless OS No forced updates All the icons right there Open source Allows you to fix things Unix philosophy The answers are there -- 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/415) 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) YouTube Show Notes & Podcast Download available at http://podcast.asknoahshow.com Support us on Patreon ------------- https://www.patreon.com/linuxdelta --- Connect with us! --- On Twitter ------------------------ https://twitter.com/asknoahshow On Facebook ----------------------- https://www.facebook.com/asknoahshow Email The Show -------------------- live@asknoahshow.com • Ask Noah Show © CC-BY-ND 2021 •
Als Auftakt zu den Tux-Tagen 2024 reden Hauke, Jean und Micha über Thunderbird für Android,Matrix Clents, Fedora 41, Haukes Bootproblem und stellen sich der Frage den Linux Desktop vereinheitlichen.
Als Desktop-Linux für alle war Ubuntu im Oktober 2004 mit Ubuntu 4.10 mit dem Spitznamen Warty Warthog gestartet. Ubuntu trat als einsteigerfreundliche Linux-Distribution an, als die es sich schnell einen Namen machte. Dafür gab es mehrere Gründe, beispielsweise den Installationsassistenten, der nicht allzu viele Fragen stellt und ein alltagstaugliches Linux-System auf der Festplatte installiert. Ubuntu 4.10 passte zudem auf eine einzige CD und ließ sich so auch leichter verteilen. Von da an erschien zwanzig Jahre lang zweimal im Jahr eine neue Ausgabe und das bis auf eine einzige Ausnahme auch immer recht pünktlich. Und es gibt keinen Grund anzunehmen, dass sich das in nächster Zeit ändern könnte. Im Laufe seiner Entwicklung ging Canonicals Distribution so manches Mal eigene Wege, die sich nicht immer durchsetzen konnten. Die aktuellste Ubuntu-Version ist die im Oktober erschienene Jubiläumsausgabe 24.10 „Oracular Oriole“. In diesem c't uplink skizzieren wir die Entwicklung von Ubuntu mit wichtigen Meilensteinen und ergründen, wo Ubuntu heutzutage erfolgreich ist und wo nicht. Anlässlich des Jubiläums führte c't-Redakteure ein Interview mit Ubuntu-Gründer und -Geldgeber Mark Shuttleworth und befragten diesen zu vergangenen Entwicklungen und Plänen für die Zukunft. Ihre Eindrücke schildern sie ebenfalls in dieser Podcastausgabe. In unserem [WhatsApp-Kanal](https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaCUFFEInlqYnQg2lb0h) sortieren Torsten und Jan aus der Chefredaktion das Geschehen in der IT-Welt, fassen das Wichtigste zusammen und werfen einen Blick auf das, was unsere Kollegen gerade so vorbereiten.
But how many Linux PCs are actually in use? Let's break out the spreadsheets and figure that out!The article:https://lunduke.locals.com/post/6020029/total-linux-desktop-pcs-now-over-56-millionMore from The Lunduke Journal:https://lunduke.com/ This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lunduke.substack.com/subscribe
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:
We've got a lot of big news for Linux users this week! We've got everything from marketshare growth to the latest updates for your favorite distros. Desktop Linux hits 4% market share! That's the highest ever by the way. Linux From Scratch just released a new version for those of you who dream of building […]
https://youtu.be/0cCBn-iMOUY Forum Discussion Thread (https://forum.tuxdigital.com/t/256-linux-desktop-growth-fedora-dropping-xorg-nintendo-vs-yuzu-lawsuit-amp-more-linux-news/6185) We've got a lot of big news for Linux users this week! We've got everything from marketshare growth to the latest updates for your favorite distros. Desktop Linux hits 4% market share! That's the highest ever by the way. Linux From Scratch just released a new version for those of you who dream of building your own OS. Fedora is considering dropping XOrg entirely on Fedora 41 Workstation. Arch Linux users are getting a pretty big update to their package manager, Pacman. Plus we are so close to 30,000 subscribers on my YouTube channel, if you enjoy this show and aren't subscribe to my channel then I'd appreciate it if you help me reach that milestone. That would be awesome. Now let's jump into This Week in Linux, Your Source for Linux GNews! Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/4edd037a-6771-4d27-b289-6abd39780b1d.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 01:08 I'm going to SCALE - [link (https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/21x)] 03:31 4% Marketshare for Linux on StatCounter! - [link (https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/desktop/worldwide)] 06:28 Nintendo says Game Over to Yuzu Emulator with $2.4 Million lawsuit - [link (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2024/03/yuzu-agrees-to-pay-nintendo-2-4-million-and-will-entirely-shut-down/)] 11:40 Open Collective Foundation is shutting down - [OCF (https://opencollective.foundation/), OSC comment (https://opencollective.com/opensource/updates/regarding-the-announcement-to-dissolve-open-collective-foundation)] 15:04 Sponsored by Kolide - [link (https://thisweekinlinux.com/kolide)] 16:26 Fedora Project Considering Dropping XOrg from Workstation - [link (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Fedora-41-No-GNOME-Xorg-Install)] 20:56 Flock to Fedora Conference - [link (https://fedoramagazine.org/flock-2024-rochester-new-york/)] 23:28 HDMI Forum 'blocks AMD open sourcing its 2.1 drivers' - [link (https://www.phoronix.com/news/HDMI-2.1-OSS-Rejected)] 24:37 Zorin OS 17.1 Released - [link (https://blog.zorin.com/2024/03/07/zorin-os-17.1-is-released/)] 26:37 OpenMediaVault 7.0 Released - [link (https://www.openmediavault.org/?p=3663)] 28:40 Arch Linux's Pacman 6.1 Released - [link (https://gitlab.archlinux.org/pacman/pacman/-/releases/v6.1.0)] 30:10 Linux From Scratch 12.1 Released - [link (https://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/sympa/arc/lfs-announce/2024-03/msg00001.html)] 33:34 Outro
Linux Crosses 4% market share worldwide! K9 Mail simplifies adding new emails accounts, Audacity heads to the cloud, and cooling your PC with Grafana.
Barton George of Dell joins us to discuss his involvement with 'Project Sputnik', an initiative created about 11 years ago aimed at making Dell hardware more appealing to developers. The project involved making pre-installed Linux laptops available to consumers. Our conversation touched on the community's loyalty, support, and critiques, which have significantly influenced Dell's approach. Notably, Barton highlighted the crucial turning point in Dell's market strategy of veering towards high-end hardware while preserving the open source platform, enabling synergy between corporate dynamics and grassroots community efforts. 00:00 Introduction and Event Impressions 00:58 Barton George's Journey in Open Source 02:17 The Birth of Project Sputnik 07:33 The Role of Community 11:23 The Future of Linux Laptops 20:53 Conclusion and Final Thoughts Guest: Barton George has been involved with Linux and open source for over 15 years. For the last 10+ years he has been at Dell Technologies where, beyond Linux and open source, he has focused on cloud native computing and devops. Currently Barton is a member of Dell's developer relations team. In addition to his day job, Barton is the founder and lead of Project Sputnik, a line of Ubuntu-powered developer laptops and workstations. Born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, Barton is a single father of three teenagers. He and his children happily reside just outside Austin, Texas.
Coming up in this episode * The Linux Desktop is the best! * There are humans on the other end of the Internet. * We do some Browser spectating. * Gentoo loses its mind. 0:00 Cold Open 1:43 Why Not Linux? 25:39 Browser Watch! 55:47 Reverb Focus 1:10:18 Community Focus: DB Tech 1:15:03 Gentoo Focus 1:24:26 Next Time: KDE History 1:26:31 Stinger Watch the video version: https://youtu.be/P6irQ0xyv-U So, why don't you use Linux? The Mastodon post (https://theres.life/@arraybolt3/111681525443443676) that sparked our conversation. It also got posted to Reddit and this was one reply (https://www.reddit.com/r/linuxsucks/s/v6zShddD3j)
Our favorite Linux DEs, our opinions on how to stop CSAM, and more from SR153Q&A, join our next Q&A on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/surveillancepodSupport us on PatreonSupport us on LiberapayMonero: 46iGe5D49rpgH4dde32rmyWifMjw5sHy7V2mD9sXGDJgSWmAwQvuAuoD9KcLFKYFsLGLpzXQs1eABRShm1RZRnSy6HgbhQDTimestamps00:00 Introduction00:14 Our favorite Linux DEs01:44 How should companies tackle CSAM?08:24 Encrypted cloud sync using Big TechMain SitesSurveillance ReportOdyseePeerTubeTechlore WebsiteThe New Oil Website This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit surveillancepod.substack.com
Has Canonical finally nailed snaps? Why it looks like Ubuntu has turned a new corner; our thoughts on the latest release. Plus, a special guest and more.
While chaos is brewing in SUSE and Red Hat land, Canonical stays the course and doubles down on the Linux desktop. Plus, our thoughts on the kernel team GPL-blocking NVIDIA.
https://youtu.be/hRPizIVkMhY Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/32f28071-0b08-4ea1-afcc-37af75bd83d6/e6c07773-94fb-48d8-bc9f-39fd058a09a0.mp3) On this episode of Destination Linux (333), AlmaLinux is making some waves in the Enterprise Linux world. Linux desktop marketshare has broken a usage barrier. And we help out a mate from Australia with finding a silent keyboard. Plus of course, we have our tips, tricks and software picks for you. So join us on the journey to Destination Linux. Sponsored by LINBIT = https://linbit.com Hosted by: Michael Tunnell = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Jill Bryant = https://jilllinuxgirl.com Want to Support the Show? Become a Patron = https://tuxdigital.com/membership Store = https://tuxdigital.com/store Chapters: 00:00 DL 333 Intro 01:00 Community Feedback - Logitech - https://amzn.to/44FAwgB - Superbcco - https://amzn.to/3KBNGDt - https://amzn.to/3O6ZYEA - Jelly Comb - https://www.jellycomb.com/.../kut019... (https://www.jellycomb.com/collections/keyboards-and-mouse-combos/products/kut019-wireless-keyboard-mouse-combo?variant=32955295465562) - https://www.jellycomb.com/.../ks15-2... (https://www.jellycomb.com/collections/keyboards-and-mouse-combos/products/ks15-2-wireless-keyboard-mouse-combo?variant=32942942486618) - https://www.jellycomb.com/.../ks45-3... (https://www.jellycomb.com/collections/keyboards-and-mouse-combos/products/ks45-3-wireless-keyboard-mouse-combo?variant=32942942617690) - Roccat - https://amzn.to/3Y6k4Dw 15:19 LINBIT - https://linbit.com 16:37 Linux Desktop Marketshare Increases to 3% - [ link (https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/desktop/worldwide) ] 31:07 AlmaLinux Reacts to Red Hat's RHEL Source Code Changes - [ link (https://almalinux.org/blog/future-of-almalinux/) ] 41:47 Gaming: Pincrediball - [ link (https://store.steampowered.com/app/2378150/Pincrediball/) ] 46:54 Software Spotlight: JamesDSP for Linux - [ link (https://flathub.org/apps/me.timschneeberger.jdsp4linux) ] 49:57 Tip of the Week: how to see if you are using Wayland or Xorg [ echo $XDGSESSIONTYPE ] 52:55 Outro
FULL SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/destination-linux/dl-333/
Today, we talk to Juliet about what's wrong with security programs today and what security leaders should be doing to fix them. We'll discuss how security programs can look rosy... until the incident hits, and the true posture of the organization is laid bare. How can CISOs still look good and maintain the org's trust under the worst of circumstances? In this interview, Jules will tell us how. Zero Trust is an imperfect concept and is often impractical to deploy comprehensively at scale, but that doesn't mean it can't do any good. In this interview, we talk with practitioner Ryan Fried about his experiences implementing Zero Trust in real life. We'll also discuss his new role at Mandiant, and why the glue that holds together people, process, and tools is so important. Finally, in the enterprise security news, Secure Code Warrior raises $50M to continue educating developers on best security practices, Jamf acquires dataJAR, IronNet's public run ends soon, Microsoft puts pressure on other cybersecurity stocks, We discuss the Microsoft Storm breach, How to make engineers not hate you, Securely build features using AI APIs WormGPT, National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan, Cybersecurity labels Google plans to scrape everything you post for AI, & the Year of the Linux Desktop! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-324
Today, we talk to Juliet about what's wrong with security programs today and what security leaders should be doing to fix them. We'll discuss how security programs can look rosy... until the incident hits, and the true posture of the organization is laid bare. How can CISOs still look good and maintain the org's trust under the worst of circumstances? In this interview, Jules will tell us how. Zero Trust is an imperfect concept and is often impractical to deploy comprehensively at scale, but that doesn't mean it can't do any good. In this interview, we talk with practitioner Ryan Fried about his experiences implementing Zero Trust in real life. We'll also discuss his new role at Mandiant, and why the glue that holds together people, process, and tools is so important. Finally, in the enterprise security news, Secure Code Warrior raises $50M to continue educating developers on best security practices, Jamf acquires dataJAR, IronNet's public run ends soon, Microsoft puts pressure on other cybersecurity stocks, We discuss the Microsoft Storm breach, How to make engineers not hate you, Securely build features using AI APIs WormGPT, National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan, Cybersecurity labels Google plans to scrape everything you post for AI, & the Year of the Linux Desktop! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-324
Finally, in the enterprise security news, Secure Code Warrior raises $50M to continue educating developers on best security practices, Jamf acquires dataJAR, IronNet's public run ends soon, Microsoft puts pressure on other cybersecurity stocks, We discuss the Microsoft Storm breach, How to make engineers not hate you, Securely build features using AI APIs WormGPT, National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan, Cybersecurity labels Google plans to scrape everything you post for AI, & the Year of the Linux Desktop! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-324
Finally, in the enterprise security news, Secure Code Warrior raises $50M to continue educating developers on best security practices, Jamf acquires dataJAR, IronNet's public run ends soon, Microsoft puts pressure on other cybersecurity stocks, We discuss the Microsoft Storm breach, How to make engineers not hate you, Securely build features using AI APIs WormGPT, National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan, Cybersecurity labels Google plans to scrape everything you post for AI, & the Year of the Linux Desktop! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-324
Debian 12 is out! Unifying the PC desktops with Kera, poking the Presonus ioStation with a Linux stick, and a Pi powered robo dingo.
Full Show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/sudo-show/sudo-62/
The results from the recent HDR Hackfest, Mozilla's new acquisition, and the concerning crack down on free software encryption.
Why Fedora 38 might Sway you to try it; and how it runs on the MacBook M1 Max.
What we like about Fedora 38, why the Rust foundation is in hot water, and more.
A classic gadget gets a Linux-powered new lease on life, the next project getting Rusty, great news for Btrfs users, and more.
Sponsors Bitwarden (https://bitwarden.com/tux) Linode (https://linode.com/tux) Links Kolide (https://www.kolide.com/) FleetDM (https://fleetdm.com/) Desktop Market Share Stats 2009-2023 (https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/desktop/united-states-of-america/#monthly-200901-202303)
What we're liking about GNOME 44, how Microsoft's Linux distro is trying to attract more users, and we bust a CentOS myth.
In the security news: AI on your PI, no flipper for you, stealing Tesla's by accident, firmware at scale, the future of the Linux desktop, protect your attributes, SOCKS5 for your Burp, TPM 2.0 vulnerabilities, the world's most vulnerable door device and hiding from "Real" hackers, sandwiches, robot lawyers, poisonis epipens, and profanity in your code! All that, and more, on this episode of Paul's Security Weekly! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw776
Robert McQueen shares the inside scoop on Flathub's ambitious plans to create a universal app store for all distros—and we ask the hard questions. Special Guest: Robert McQueen.
FFmpeg gets new superpowers, Plasma's switch to Qt6 gets official; what you need to know. Plus we round up the top features coming to Linux 6.3.
Christine Hall gives Doc Searls and Simon Phipps a tour of the glorious past, troubling present, and uncertain future of free software and open source, which makes both as well as a discussion on the GPL. Hosts: Doc Searls and Simon Phipps Guest: Christine Hall Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
An Ubuntu expiration date approaches, openSUSE has a new handy solution, and the container security issue that remains unfixed.
Christine Hall gives Doc Searls and Simon Phipps a tour of the glorious past, troubling present, and uncertain future of free software and open source, which makes both as well as a discussion on the GPL. Hosts: Doc Searls and Simon Phipps Guest: Christine Hall Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Christine Hall gives Doc Searls and Simon Phipps a tour of the glorious past, troubling present, and uncertain future of free software and open source, which makes both as well as a discussion on the GPL. Hosts: Doc Searls and Simon Phipps Guest: Christine Hall Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Christine Hall gives Doc Searls and Simon Phipps a tour of the glorious past, troubling present, and uncertain future of free software and open source, which makes both as well as a discussion on the GPL. Hosts: Doc Searls and Simon Phipps Guest: Christine Hall Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Doc Searls, Katherine Druckman and Jonathan Bennett kick off the new year with a round table discussion regarding the world of open source. The hosts are joined by a special guest for this discussion, Leo Laporte. It's a great discussion regarding open source security, centralized versus decentralized products on the web, and much more. Hosts: Doc Searls, Jonathan Bennett, Katherine Druckman, and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: fastmail.com/twit kolide.com/floss
The Linux kernel has some exciting updates this week, including a significant Asahi milestone and some good news for Android. Then we take openSUSE's new web-based installer for a spin.
In Citrix Consulting Services, most of our engagements involve Microsoft technologies. But Linux virtual desktops have proved to be an interesting use case for many of our customers.It's an ideal solution for developers, high-graphics users, and others. One interesting scenario I worked on recently involved a non-domain joined (NDJ) Linux VDA, which provides IT departments with the ability to deliver a Linux Desktop in a segregated, secure environment where Active Directory integration is not possible.By: David PisaHost: Andy WhitesideCo-host: Bill SuttonCo-host: Geremy MeyersCo-host: Todd Smith
After nearly half a year of woe, Brent is ready to give Linux the go. Join us as we compare and contrast two Linux distros and end up with one going on Brent's machine. Plus, follow-up on Chris' GrapheneOS adventures and more.
We dig into Shufflecake, a tool that lets Linux users hide data with plausible deniability, then let our live stream SSH into our server and see if they can discover our secret data. Plus, we follow up on Brent's never-ending desktop distro search and Chris' new Linux rig.
Bill, Neal and Brandon get together to talk about "can you just drop linux in place of windows" on the business/enterprise desktop Links: TuxDigital - https://tuxDigital.com/ (https://tuxdigital.com) Sudo Show - https://sudo.show (https://sudo.show) Bitwarden - https://bitwarden.com/tux (https://bitwarden.com/tux) Digital Ocean - https://do.co/tux2022 (https://do.co/tux2022) Discussion Points The Register Article - https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/10/opinioncolumndropwindowsfor_linux/ (https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/10/opinion_column_drop_windows_for_linux/) Open Source Linux Desktop Management Solutions FleetDM - https://fleetdm.com (https://fleetdm.com) FleetDM is an great frontend to OSQuery and is designed to work with end user devices. Gnome Fleet Commander - https://fleet-commander.org (https://fleet-commander.org) Fleet Commander is built to push configuration to Gnome Desktops. The Foreman - https://theforeman.org (https://theforeman.org) Foreman is focused on Servers but pair it with Katello it allows you to have a contentment management system for packages and works with both RPM and Debian distros. Works nicely with Gnome Software. Special Guests: Bill Schouten and Neal Gompa.
On this episode of For Mac Eyes Only: Mike, Eric and special guest Darren Davies discuss virtualization vs emulation, how to run Windows and Linux on your Intel or Apple Silicon Mac, and using a “headless” Windows (or Linux) PC as a Remote Desktop solution. They wrap things up with a run-down of alternative options for running older operating systems, stand-alone apps, and games on your Mac. Plus Darren gives us a peek into his quest for the perfect Linux Desktop!
Is the Linux desktop hard to love? A long-time user experience developer argues it is, and we respond to his criticisms.
From skeptic to buyer, why the HP Dev One is the best Linux laptop yet. This is the one review you don't want to miss.
If we could change just one mistake in our Linux journey, what would it be? Open a channel to our node: 037d284d2d7e6cec7623 (https://amboss.space/node/037d284d2d7e6cec7623adbe600450a73b42fb90800989f05a862464b05408df39)