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This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about: turning people into products, patches into pounds and pence, protecting poultry, priorities, primary patchers on projects, and PDFs into poison. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. How do you say “infringement” in Farsi? Gunnar: There’s an app for that HT @CampCatastrophe: Deep Brain Stimulation implant “about the size of a stopwatch” Almost related: LG jumps on the vestibulo-ocular reflex chicken powered steady cam bandwagon Not related: Chicken safety vest HT Keenan: First Amendment expert Eugene Volokh on Sufficient Speech vs. Facebook HT Matt Micene: If you use Google services, you could become an ad next month Step 1: Opt out here Step 2: Enable Adblock Plus or Adblock Edge Moral of the story: don’t get Scroogled. At least Microsoft isn’t doing creepy tracking. Oh wait, never mind. LinkedIn makes hacker’s dreams come true State Decoded has the SCAP Security Guide baked in! HT Mil-OSS: Google Offers New Bounty Program For Securing Open-Source Software News Flash: Oracle Still Hates Open Source Software Mil-OSS weighs in Nominations Now Open for 2014 Red Hat Innovation Awards Red Hat Summit Call for Proposals closes November 5 Red Hat Government Symposium is on for November 6! JBoss Day in Austin on November 12 C5ISR Summit in Charleston on November 13 Alamo ACE (AFCEA) in San Antonio on November 19 Cantas = open source Trello Matt Micene and Dave celebrate National Cybersecurity Awareness Month with a blog post RHEL 5.9 to 5.10 risk report Measure it yourself RIP acroread OpenStack Havana is out! Activity dashboard RHEV 3.3 beta has OpenStack goodness too HT Yasir Syeed: OpenStack threatens Paas? Customers and partners we like Emergent and Red Hat Announce Cloud Collaboration Around OpenShift PaaS The Navy’s newest warship is powered by Linux The Eisenhower Matrix The Ten Most Expensive Vehicles To Operate Cutting Room Floor Pizza Hat HUD for your car Raspberry Pi internet controlled whoopie cushion Build your own Arduino powered Enigma machine Open source HTML5 Full Screen Mario Run Linux on an emulated MIPS processor… in your browser w/JavaScript! (Securely?) Boot to Zork using UEFI A Klingon Christmas Carol performed in the original Klingon with English supertitles and narrative analysis from the Vulcan Institute of Cultural Anthropology Jim Henson’s Muppet Computer from 1963 The scientific proof why Dave is addicted to Nacho Cheese Doritos 27 Actors Who Got Their Starts on Miami Vice We Give Thanks @CampCatastrophe, Keenan, Matt Micene, Mil-OSS, and Yasir Syeed for encouraging us by giving us items to discuss!
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about: Professional Wrestling, Professional Android Security, Professional Evangelism with Steve Citron-Pousty, and a very unprofessional Linus Torvalds. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. Cutting someone’s mail queue in half. Gunnar’s buddy Andy suggests he builds his own desk: Make Your Own Multi-Level, Adjustable Height Standing Desk Gunnar thinks Andy, a carpenter, is overdue for a visit to Austin Multi level filing system makes a perfect accessory for a multi level desk WWE embarrassed as wrestling match outcomes leaked online Google Storing WLAN Passwords In the Clear c#29: “Is the general public willing to lose access to their backup should they forget their password?” Encrypt-y the Bear: only you can prevent password leakage Listener action item: We need a Dan Walsh-looking Encrypt-y the Bear picture Crypto Cat is a registered trademark of the NSA CyanogenMod to incorporate SELinux Linus Torvalds Defends His God-Given Right to Offend You Red Hat Partner Day Events Mil-OSS, August 7th and 8th in Charleston, SC Lauren’s Scratch on Raspberry Pi Akron LUG presentation on August 1 The Great Guinea Pig Escape has >1000 views! CloudFORMS NOW!: A web site we like and need to know who made it RHEL 5.10 beta includes SCAP 1.2 and Red Hat Access Red Hat Summit 2013 – Streamlining and Accelerating Your IT Service Delivery with OpenShift Enterprise Department of Interior joins the ranks of SCAP Security Guide committers Gunnar at the Champions for Change event An open source effort we like: Code for America HT Steven Citron-Pousty: (OpenShift powered) Interactive Atlas Highlights Water Use Issues in California Interactive Atlas Highlights Water Use Issues in California The New California Water Atlas Cutting Room Floor Speak Spanish like Che Guevara: Coup Lingo Emulate a Raspberry Pi with Pidora on QEMU Upgrade your microwave oven to be controlled by a Raspberry Pi Powering your Raspberry Pi with fire If you aren’t ready yet to upload your mind to Google: Inside Google HQ: What does the future hold for the company whose visionary plans include implanting a chip in our brains? We Give Thanks Andy for reminding us how bad we were at wood shop Element 14 and the Akron LUG for being so supportive of Lauren and young makers everywhere Steven Citron-Pousty for guest starring on the show! Erich Morisse for helping us speak Spanish like a revolutionary Kutiman, for the Mother of All Funk Chords
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about the worst virus remediation ever, the NSA all up in your phone, fashion advice from Dan Walsh, and a whole bunch of Gunnarbait. This episode is dedicated to Seth Vidal. Please visit this page of Seth Vidal memorial events. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. Dapper Dan. Gunnar’s housewarming gift to himself: The Uplift desk Smoking with skeumorphism, round 2: Anti-Smoking Cage Helmet An asthma-inhaler-looking Nicotine delivery device isn’t as cool as an electronic cigarette What if they looked like Neuroin inhalers? AT&T Considers Selling Your Browsing History, Location, And More To Advertisers. Here’s How To Opt Out MIT Project Reveals What PRISM Knows About You This week in Gunnarbait: Security-Enhanced Android: NSA Edition Reality check: Yes, the NSA contributed code to Android. No, you don’t have to freak out about it Get your very own “setenforce 1” tshirt For first time ever, feds asked to sit out Defcon hacker conference Researchers Now Pulling Out of DEF CON In Response To Anti-Fed Position US government agency destroys hardware to clear malware No More 3D TV On The BBC Please, We’re British — And Glasses Are A Hassle Movie of the week: Bots High Survival Research Labs More Gunnarbait: Google Explains Why Its Cloud Service Is Different When It Comes To Lock-In Events Mil-OSS, August 7th and 8th in Charleston, SC Drupal4Gov, August 14 and 15th in DC Adam Clater wants an open standard instead of Dropbox Gunnar’s mom is using OpenShift (really!) Joe Biden sings the praises of the Villages Gunnar plays with OwnCloud OwnCloud on OpenShift thanks to Isaac Christoffersen Liberate your Files: A Solution from Vizuri using ownCloud, OpenShift, & Red Hat Storage Server by Isaac Christoffersen, Matt Richards, Ted Brunell Cutting Room Floor Mosh: SSH over UDP for stateless terminals Once you’ve mastered the Purdie Shuffle, try the Amen Break A piece of Gunnar’s childhood for sale Raspberry Pi powered anthropomorphic coffee making robot Hyper realistic 3D printed spider octopod robot RepRap Morgan: 3D printer that prints its own parts Hardware design and controller firmware on GitHub Scratch-controlled barking robot dog! How Girls Should Serve Raspberry Pi How to Travel Around the World for $418 Documents Reveal How the NSA Cracked the Kryptos Sculpture Years Before the CIA “Linux for Workgroups”: Linux 3.11’s feature set now confirmed We Give Thanks Major Hayden for the Defcon tip Adam Clater for getting us to think about a more open Dropbox Isaac Christoffersen for the OwnCloud on OpenShift Quickstart Evan Rose reminding us of the Amen Break
John Scott, Director of Open Source Software and Open Integration at RadientBlue Technologies, joined Deb Bryant of Oregon State University's Open Source Lab to discuss how open source software and development approaches are used in the US Department of Defense. John is well known for his work for the DoD on the groundbreaking "Open Technology Development Roadmap". Published in April of 2006, the document examines opportunities that DoD could exploit to improve technology outcomes and lower costs, largely addressing the change in culture and practices that DoD would need to undertake to take advantage of OSS in the US Military. Scott also participates deeply in the Military Open source community, managing the Mil-OSS Google Group and organizing events including the Mil-OSS conference & unconference. Information can be found at http://mil-oss.org/. In the interview, Scott talks about recent news about OSS throughout the DOD. He shares news of a recent policy memo issued but the DoD CIO, recognizing open source software and participation in open source communities and projects as being officially permitted by the US Department of Defense. He also shares news of a forthcoming DoD open technology "field manual", addressing needs throughout the DoD to understand how to utilize open source on a military project. Scott also mentions some military software projects that have been released to the world as open source projects. He talks about the growth of geospatial OSS and he specifically mentions Falconview, a route planning & spatial analysis system used by the Marines for route planning. Scott also credits the rest of the US Federal Government for adopting more open source software, especially state and local government where lots of discussion are happening. Thanks to John for joining us. His blog can be found at http://powdermonkey.blogs.com/.