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NetBSD 10 on a Pinebook Pro, OpenBSD extreme privacy setup, Version 256 of systemd boasts '42% less Unix philosophy', Posix.1 2024 is out, Blocking Access From or to Specific Countries Using FreeBSD and Pf, and more. Date: 2024.06.17 NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines NetBSD 10 on a Pinebook Pro (https://www.idatum.net/netbsd-10-on-a-pinebook-pro-laptop.html) OpenBSD extreme privacy setup (https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2024-06-08-openbsd-privacy-setup.html) News Roundup Version 256 of systemd boasts '42% less Unix philosophy' (https://www.theregister.com/2024/06/13/version_256_systemd/) Posix.1 2024 is out (https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10555529) Blocking Access From or to Specific Countries Using FreeBSD and Pf (https://it-notes.dragas.net/2024/06/16/freebsd-blocking-country-access/) Beastie Bits BSD User Group Düsseldorf Juli 2024 (https://www.meetup.com/de-DE/bsd-user-group-dusseldorf-bsd-nrw/events/301557512/) Another cool UNIX workstation, that was never released (https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/1dd60re/another_cool_unix_workstation_that_was_never/) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Feedback/Questions Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) Join us and other BSD Fans in our BSD Now Telegram channel (https://t.me/bsdnow)
Open Source Software: The $9 Trillion Resource Companies Take for Granted, Tinkering with Manjaro and NetBSD on the Pinebook Pro: a crumbs-in-the-forest tutorial & review, OpenSMTPD 7.5.0p0 Released, OpenBSD 7.5 locks down with improved disk encryption support and syscall limitations, Book 8088, Custom Prometheus dashboards using Console templates, FreeBSD Foundation March 2024 Partnerships Update, Ray tracing made possible on 42-year-old ZX Spectrum: 'reasonably fast, if you consider 17 hours per frame to be reasonably fast', and more NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines Open Source Software: The $9 Trillion Resource Companies Take for Granted (https://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/open-source-software-the-nine-trillion-resource-companies-take-for-granted) Tinkering with Manjaro and NetBSD on the Pinebook Pro: a crumbs-in-the-forest tutorial & review (https://www.autodidacts.io/pinebook-pro-linux-bsd-laptop-review-tutorial/) News Roundup OpenSMTPD 7.5.0p0 Released (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20240410185045) OpenBSD 7.5 locks down with improved disk encryption support and syscall limitations (https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/12/openbsd_75_disk_encryption/) Book 8088 (https://liliputing.com/version-2-0-of-the-book-8088-retro-mini-laptop-adds-vga-graphics-card-and-serial-ports/) Custom Prometheus dashboards using Console templates (https://tumfatig.net/2024/custom-prometheus-dashboards-using-console-templates/) FreeBSD Foundation March 2024 Partnerships Update (https://freebsdfoundation.org/blog/march-2024-partnerships-update/) Ray tracing made possible on 42-year-old ZX Spectrum: 'reasonably fast, if you consider 17 hours per frame to be reasonably fast' (https://www.pcgamer.com/ray-tracing-made-possible-on-42-year-old-zx-spectrum-reasonably-fast-if-you-consider-17-hours-per-frame-to-be-reasonably-fast/) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) Join us and other BSD Fans in our BSD Now Telegram channel (https://t.me/bsdnow)
table td.shrink { white-space:nowrap } New hosts Welcome to our new host: Kinghezy. Last Month's Shows Id Day Date Title Host 3717 Tue 2022-11-01 Video editing with Shotcut on a low end PC MrX 3718 Wed 2022-11-02 Making Ansible playbooks to configure Single Sign On for popular open source applications Jeroen Baten 3719 Thu 2022-11-03 HPR News Some Guy On The Internet 3720 Fri 2022-11-04 Practicing Batch Files With ECHO Ahuka 3721 Mon 2022-11-07 HPR Community News for October 2022 HPR Volunteers 3722 Tue 2022-11-08 Bash snippet - plurals in messages Dave Morriss 3723 Wed 2022-11-09 HPR News Some Guy On The Internet 3724 Thu 2022-11-10 My top Android apps Archer72 3725 Fri 2022-11-11 How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport Ken Fallon 3726 Mon 2022-11-14 Breaches ever reaching Lurking Prion 3727 Tue 2022-11-15 Expanding your filesystem with LVM Rho`n 3728 Wed 2022-11-16 Pinebook Pro review binrc 3729 Thu 2022-11-17 Contributing to SuperTuxKart Celeste 3730 Fri 2022-11-18 Into Arizona Ahuka 3731 Mon 2022-11-21 Speech recognition in Kdenlive dnt 3732 Tue 2022-11-22 My experience owning an Atari Jaguar m0dese7en 3733 Wed 2022-11-23 Smite Some Guy On The Internet 3734 Thu 2022-11-24 Inetd: the internet super-server binrc 3735 Fri 2022-11-25 i3 Tiling Window Manager Archer72 3736 Mon 2022-11-28 Metasyntactic words Klaatu 3737 Tue 2022-11-29 Review of KOBO Libra H20 e-reader Rho`n 3738 Wed 2022-11-30 Intro to KMyMoney Kinghezy Comments this month These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows. There are 25 comments in total. Past shows There are 6 comments on 5 previous shows: hpr3698 (2022-10-05) "Spectrogram" by Klaatu. Comment 2: MrX on 2022-11-04: "What a great tip" hpr3705 (2022-10-14) "The Year of the FreeBSD Desktop" by binrc. Comment 3: binrc on 2022-11-03: "additional links" hpr3711 (2022-10-24) "Cars" by Zen_Floater2. Comment 2: dnt on 2022-11-09: "pedestrians and cyclists" hpr3714 (2022-10-27) "The News with Some Guy On the Internet" by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 5: Dave Morriss on 2022-11-02: "Beautifully done!" hpr3715 (2022-10-28) "Secret hat conversations, Part 2." by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 3: Dave Morriss on 2022-11-02: "A very interesting discussion" Comment 4: DeepGeek on 2022-11-03: "Phone, Tiling wm," This month's shows There are 19 comments on 12 of this month's shows: hpr3719 (2022-11-03) "HPR News" by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 1: mike M. on 2022-11-04: "Another form of typosquatting" hpr3721 (2022-11-07) "HPR Community News for October 2022" by HPR Volunteers. Comment 1: Archer72 on 2022-11-07: "Weirdos" hpr3722 (2022-11-08) "Bash snippet - plurals in messages" by Dave Morriss. Comment 1: rho`n on 2022-11-11: "Great tip!"Comment 2: Dave Morriss on 2022-11-16: "Thanks rho`n" hpr3725 (2022-11-11) "How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport " by Ken Fallon. Comment 1: Kevin O'Brien on 2022-11-14: "Useful and timely" hpr3726 (2022-11-14) "Breaches ever reaching" by Lurking Prion. Comment 1: hammerron on 2022-11-15: "Old LiveJournal" hpr3727 (2022-11-15) "Expanding your filesystem with LVM" by Rho`n. Comment 1: Zen_floater2 on 2022-11-18: "Love server problems" hpr3728 (2022-11-16) "Pinebook Pro review" by binrc. Comment 1: Zen_floater2 on 2022-11-18: "I liked this show."Comment 2: one_of_spoons on 2022-11-21: "Programmable ROM."Comment 3: b on 2022-11-24: "rockchip"Comment 4: sunzu on 2022-11-26: "available distros" hpr3729 (2022-11-17) "Contributing to SuperTuxKart" by Celeste. Comment 1: dnt on 2022-11-17: "Car rambling" hpr3730 (2022-11-18) "Into Arizona" by Ahuka. Comment 1: Clinton Roy on 2022-11-19: "Dam?" hpr3731 (2022-11-21) "Speech recognition in Kdenlive" by dnt. Comment 1: Celeste on 2022-11-21: "didn't know the feature"Comment 2: dnt on 2022-11-22: "re: both libre/opensource" hpr3733 (2022-11-23) "Smite" by Some Guy On The Internet. Comment 1: Lurking Prion on 2022-11-23: "Let's do a show"Comment 2: Some Guy On The Internet on 2022-11-24: "Sure" hpr3734 (2022-11-24) "Inetd: the internet super-server" by binrc. Comment 1: sinza on 2022-11-24: "Great show!"Comment 2: Zen_floater2 on 2022-11-27: "loved this" Mailing List discussions Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under Mailman. The threaded discussions this month can be found here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2022-November/thread.html Events Calendar With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to The LWN.net Community Calendar. Quoting the site: This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track events of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software. Clicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web page. Any other business HPR RSS feeds and https links A question came up in November regarding the HPR RSS feeds. All of the URLs in these feeds use 'http' as opposed to 'https'. Although this may seem odd, this is a fairly common thing to do, because the RSS standard (such as it is) does not cater for 'https' links. There is a concern that passing an RSS feed with such links to a validator (such as the W3C Feed Validation Service) will result in it being marked as invalid. Older HPR shows on archive.org, phase 2 Now that all shows from number 1 to the latest have been uploaded to the Internet Archive there are other tasks to perform. We are reprocessing and re-uploading shows in the range 871 to 2429 as explained in the Community News show notes released in May 2022. We are keeping a running total here to show progress: Month Month count Running total Remainder 2022-04 130 130 1428 2022-05 140 270 1288 2022-06 150 420 1138 2022-07 155 575 983 2022-08 155 730 828 2022-09 150 880 678 2022-10 155 1035 523 2022-11 230 1265 293 Updated: 2022-12-03 16:10:11
Why the PBP? Lately I've been thinking a lot about power consumption when it comes to computing. Intuitively, I know that arm devices pull significantly less power than amd64 machines but I've never really tested this in the real world. So, some preliminary power consumption stats: big amd64 laptops (thinkpad x220 and t490) pull at most 65 watts small arm SOCs typically pull at most 15 watts most android phones pull at most 18 watts Pentium 4 pulls at most 250 watts These numbers are fairly easy to find: just look at the power supply for a MAXIMUM OUTPUT value or something similar. This is the point at which the power supply fails so we can safely assume this is the maximum power draw for any given computer. Of course, this is DC output and not AC output and anyone who knows anything about electricity knows that converting AC to DC is expensive but these values are useful as a general estimate. I wrote something similar about computer power consumption some time ago My goal in all of this was to find a self contained computer that runs UNIX, doesn't take much power, isn't a consumption rectangle (smartphone), and can be charged from both AC with a rectifier and stored DC without an inverter. Charging from existing stored power was probably the most novel consideration. Everything else is a given. A few obvious answers come to mind: Raspberry Pi 4 is not self contained and using a pitop in public is a good way to get the bomb squad called on you beaglebone black is good too but neither self contained nor popular enough for wide OS support Pinebook Pro is self contained and is supported by some of the operating systems I'd like to run The PBP is an obvious choice. It's an open hardware ARM laptop that can be charged via a barrel cable (AC->DC) or via USB-C. Charging from USB-C is a very useful feature because it means I can easily choose between charging from the mains where efficiency loss is acceptable and charging from a DC source where efficiency loss is unacceptable. The actual use case is "what computer can I run off of a old car battery or the alternator in my car without burning power with an inverter?". I'll revisit this use case in a later section. Initial notes I took these notes immediately upon opening the PBP. They remain unedited because I want to be honest on the first impressions. shipping I was worried about DHL dropping my package out of a plane. Or leaving it out in the rain. Or having one of the employees use it as a soccer ball. Or having the thing get stuck in customs. It ended up arriving safely and was packaged well. Two boxes within a padded envelope within another envelope. Surprising for DHL. hardware impressions Touchpad sucks and trackpad scrolling sucks (it's probably just KDE). Installing synaptics drivers allegedly fix this problem. keyboard is comfortable, clickly, full sized despite being a chicklet keyboard. I don't like that the and keys are backwards when compared to a thinkpad. I really like the thinkpad keyboard layout. Shift+enter seems to type the M character. My muscle memory for key chording is now broken. This appears to be a fundamental design flaw with KDE. Passively cooled, gets a bit warm. display is sharp (IPS) and almost too high resolution for my eyes (1920x1080 instead of 1366x768). I can fix this in software. enabling/disabling mic/wifi/camera through the keyboard is confusing and (seemingly) does not perform the "kill switch" via hotplugging like the Thinkpad X220's wifi kill switch. Charger comes with both US and EU prongs. software impressions it's manjaro :( it's KDE :( it comes with mpv :) bluez instead of bluetoothd :( firewalld instead of UFW WiFi dongle. To get around no RJ45 port, I use a USB->RJ45 adapter. I have an ASIX ax88772 dongle (UGREEN branded but I'm not sure that matters). Both of these dongles seem to work with every single operating system and hardware configuration I've tried them with. Arm is strange, so we must boot from an SD card (running any OS, in my case NetBSD) in order to burn an image to the internal storage. From a separate machine, the options passed to dd are important. $ wget https://cdn.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-9.3/evbarm-aarch64/binary/gzimg/arm64.img.gz $ wget http://cdn.netbsd.org/pub/pkgsrc/packages/NetBSD/x86_64/.9.0_2022Q2_pkgbuild/All/u-boot-pinebook-pro-2022.01nb1.tgz $ gunzip ./arm64.img $ tar xzf ./u-boot-pinebook-pro-2022.01nb1.tgz $ sudo umount /dev/sdx* $ sudo dd if=./arm64.img of=/dev/sdx status=progress conv=fsync bs=1M $ sudo sync $ sudo dd if=./u-boot-pinebook-pro-2022.01nb1/share/u-boot/pinebook-pro/rksd_loader.img of=/dev/sdx seek=64 conv=sync status=progress $ sudo sync $ sudo eject /dev/sdx And, to install NetBSD to the internal EMMC, the process is similar. NetBSD's version of dd varies slightly but the options passed are important. # ftp https://cdn.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-9.3/evbarm-aarch64/binary/gzimg/arm64.img.gz # gunzip ./arm64.img # dd if=./arm64.img of=/dev/rl0d conv=sync bs=1m # sync # PKG_PATH="http://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/pkgsrc/packages/NetBSD/aarch64/9.3/All/" pkg_add pkgin # pkgin install u-boot-pinebook-pro # sudo dd if=/usr/pkg/share/u-boot/pinebook-pro/rksd_loader.img of=/dev/rld0 seek=64 conv=sync # sync # reboot And, some more desktop centric things after booting from EMMC: # passwd # echo "postfix=NO" >> /etc/rc.conf # echo "xdm=YES" >> /etc/rc.conf Installing pkgin (and some packages): # PKG_PATH="https://cdn.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/packages/NetBSD/aarch64/9.3/All/" pkg_add pkgin # sed -i'' -e 's/9.0/9.3/g' /usr/pkg/etc/pkgin/repositories.conf # pkgin install vim git mozilla-rootcerts mozilla-rootcerts-openssl The rest is NetBSD specific and I've avoided getting into it here because it doesn't have anything to do with the PBP. Performance The PBP has 6 cores (2 fast, 4 slow) and 4gb ram. The cpu is fairly slow but entirely usable. On large procedural jobs like software compilation, it's painful. For concurrent jobs, it's mostly fine. Compiler performance As expected, the PBP is slower when it comes to compilation than a standard amd64 machine. Surprisingly enough, NetBSD was significantly slower than Manjaro. This is likely due to the Linux kernel knowing how to better handle multiple CPUs with varying speeds. sequential jobs I used plan9port because it's a fairly large but portable project. Compilation is largely sequential, invokes many standard shell utilities, and involves extra preprocessor steps to convert 9 C into something a standard UNIX compiler like GCC or Clang can compile. On a T490 - 8th gen Core i7 (4 cores, 8 threads, 4.8GHz, vPro for maximum thermal output): real 232.51 (~4 minutes) user 188.07 sys 65.01 On an X220 - 2nd gen Core i5 (2 cores, 4 threads, 2.6GHz, vPro for maximum thermal output): real 249.98 (~4 minutes) user 220.33 sys 65.52 On the PBP (2 2.0GHz cores + 4 1.5GHz cores, no CPU fan for maximum thermal output) (running stock Manjaro image): real 1355.27 (~22 minutes) user 1178.47 sys 347.71 On the PBP (2 2.0GHz cores + 4 1.5GHz cores, no CPU fan for maximum thermal output) (running NetBSD): real 3715.24 (~60 minutes) user 1946.84 sys 3435.29 concurrent jobs I used vim because it can be built in parallel without causing any issues. Same 8th gen Core i7 (make -j7): real 27.36 user 170.21 sys 11.30 Same 2nd gen Core i5 (make -j7, approaching the exponential decay of marginal returns on concurrent processing): real 77.07 user 292.46 sys 10.00 On the PBP (make -j7) (running stock Manjaro image): real 220.60 user 1145.40 sys 59.90 On the PBP (make -j7) (running NetBSD): real 319.30 user 1560.87 sys 255.33 Web browser testing Because the PBP has similar hardware specifications to the adware subsidized craptops sold by google, I thought it would be a good idea to compare web browser performance on these systems as well. I found a few web browser benchmark tests at browserbench.org. They're probably snakeoil but running JS tests is a good way to put a number on how performant $browser on $hardware is. Scores from the JetStream2 test JetStream 2.1 is a JavaScript and WebAssembly benchmark suite focused on the most advanced web applications. It rewards browsers that start up quickly, execute code quickly, and run smoothly. For more information, read the in-depth analysis. Bigger scores are better. Thinkpad T490 79.555 Thinkpad X220 39.983 PBP (manjaro) 19.148 I don't have an chromesumption book to test against, so all I can say is that the PBP is slower than a workhorse amd64 machine when it comes to interpreting javascript. Conclusion Did the PBP fulfill it's needs? The intended use case was "UNIX machine I can charge from an existing battery or alternator". This immediately invokes ideas of "why would I even need wifi support?" Ultimately, I ended up flashing a bad image to the SPI flash chip and I cannot get the system to boot (or even show signs of life). I have attempted to enter maskrom mode to re-flash the SPI but I am unsuccessful. There are a few other things I need to try. I'll update this if I ever get it functional again. I did not have the opportunity to test the machine in the exact environment I got it for but it was fun before I bricked it. Again, a place for updates. Who is the PBP for? HACKERS! Obviously, the types of people who are interested in pine64 devices and similar SBCs are already computer owners (if not computer hoarders). It's unlikely that the PBP will become my (or anyone's) primary computer but that doesn't mean that it's useless. The entire point of arm SBCs is to have fun so why not have fun? Just don't flash your SPI if you want it to work as expected. Some final thoughts on open hardware Oftentimes, before purchasing freedom centric hardware, I search for a few reviews so that I can set my expectations correctly. Oftentimes these reviews are very epidermal: they're not even skin deep. These reviewers are consumers producing reviews for a consumer audience, not hackers producing in-depth reviews for hacker audience. These types of reviews are frustrating for me but fundamental flaws seem to shine through the lack of thoroughness. I think that the general negative reviews on open hardware largely stem from unrealistic expectations. The community seems to over-hype many of these devices out of ignorance, stating that $freedomDevice is the $proprietaryAlternative killer, the end all be all device that will usher in the year of the Linux $deviceCategory. Oftentimes, it seems like the high expectations fall flat when confronted with the reality of open hardware: it's either way too expensive or way too experimental. It seems like many of these devices are lacking both developer time and users who are both enthusiastic and knowledgeable. Pitfalls of mobile UNIX include bad power management, difficulty hotplugging wireless chipsets, graphical interfaces attempting to cope with the fact that they don't have a physical keyboard, etc. There is still much work to be done. As for users, it seems that the most enthusiastic users always have the impression that $linuxDevice will have 1:1 feature parity with $proprietaryDevice. Maybe it's just that the loudest users are heard or that we only want to hear utopian dreams of a free software future. A prime example of this conflict between expectations and reality: Linux smartphones. It doesn't help when many linux smartphones over the years were advertised as a viable android competitor rather than anything other than what they actually were: an arm board attached to a touch screen and a modem. I oftentimes ask myself "what is open source worth?". How much money are you willing to throw at an idea you like? Surely, money thrown at an idea you like is being used better than money thrown at an idea you don't like. In many cases, it seems like open hardware devices are more expensive than their proprietary counterparts for a few reasons. The two largest reasons are small batch manufacturing and the fact that open hardware isn't subsidized by pre-installed adware (in the case of nearly every device that comes pre-loaded with proprietary software). What is open source worth? A few extra dollars, a few extra hours of configuration, a few extra papercuts, and a clean conscious knowing that I didn't pay for yet another windows license I will never use and will never get a refund for. Open source is worth investing in because the, albeit slow, improvements to open hardware and software have wider implications than just "buying a laptop with Linux pre installed". Future projects something with the raspi NetBSD in depth "why is my lightbulb running android?" and other Internet-Of-Terror ideas turning a router into a general purpose computing device (probably MIPS because where else am I going to find a MIPS CPU? Might as well do something novel instead of $arm-project-1209)
Why is Android Auto leaving your phone? Why is Microsoft axing Excel features? And should you buy a Pinebook Pro laptop? Plus, tips and tricks for making a bootable USB drive, online city building games for your browser, and the equipment you need for starting a YouTube channel.With the tech news that matters and some tips and tricks to help you make the best use of your devices, the Really Useful Podcast is our weekly show with Christian Cawley, Ben Stegner, and Gavin Phillips.ShownotesThis week, we chat about the following tech news that matters: Google Is About to Stop You Using Android Auto on Your Phone Pinebook Pro Linux Laptop Back on Sale Microsoft Is Axing Three Excel Features Check out these tips and tricks: Tools to Make a Bootable USB Drive Online City Building Games for Your Browser Equipment for Starting your Own YouTube Channel We finish the show with the following recommendations: Stranger Things Season 4 Cities: Skylines Eskute Pollono e-bike Christian Cawley and Gavin Phillips host this podcast. You can contact them on Twitter: @thegadgetmonkey and @gavinspavin, with your suggestions for future topics.Don't forget to subscribe to the Really Useful Podcast on Apple Podcasts for more tech news and tips for technophobes!
Idiot's guide to OpenBSD on the Pinebook Pro, FreeBSD Periodic Scripts, history of service management in Unix, journey from macOS to FreeBSD, Unix processes “infecting” each other, navidrom music server on FreeBSD, and more. NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines The complete idiot's guide to OpenBSD on the Pinebook Pro (https://tomscii.sig7.se/2022/02/Guide-to-OpenBSD-on-the-PinebookPro) FreeBSD Periodic Scripts (https://klarasystems.com/articles/freebsd-periodic-scripts/) News Roundup The history (sort of) of service management in Unix (https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/unix/ServiceManagementHistory) My journey from macOS to FreeBSD (https://www.boucek.me/blog/from-mac-to-freebsd/) A nice story about Unix processes "infecting" each other (https://rachelbythebay.com/w/2022/02/09/nice/) Navidrome music server on FreeBSD (https://web.archive.org/web/20220101220446/https://www.danschmid.me/article/install-navidrome-music-server-on-freebsd) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Feedback/Questions Tyler - Is this enough for VMs (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/444/feedback/Tyler%20-%20Is%20this%20enough%20for%20VMs.md) Kevin - BSD from RAMdisk (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/445/feedback/Kevin%20-%20BSD%20from%20RAMdisk.md) Malcolm - wired headset in FreeBSD (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/445/feedback/Malcolm%20-%20wired%20headset%20in%20FreeBSD.md) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) ***
0:00 Cold Open 0:48 Coming Up 1:22 Banter: Keychron 8:31 History: elementary OS 45:40 Thoughts: elementary OS 1:04:16 Laptop Suspend Bug 1:15:14 Housekeeping 1:24:44 AppFocus: OpenSnitch 1:31:16 Next Time 1:31:49 Distro of the Month Reveal 1:34:28 Stinger Coming up in this episode 1. Leo types on clouds 2. We take a trip down memory lane with elementary 3. We look at the current state of Odin 4. Finally, we snitch on apps Banter - The Keyboard Leo's new keyboard (https://www.keychron.com/pages/keychron-k3-wireless-mechanical-keyboard) Elementary OS Elementary OS (https://elementary.io) Elementary roots (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_OS) Elementary OS 6 - Odin Release announcement (https://blog.elementary.io/elementary-os-6-odin-released/) Visual changes for Odin (https://blog.elementary.io/look-and-feel-changes-elementary-os-6/) Elementary Blog (https://blog.elementary.io) Slimbook has Elementary as an option (https://blog.elementary.io/devices-slimbook/) Elementary on the Pinebook Pro (https://blog.elementary.io/elementary-os-on-pinebook-pro/) Flatpak (https://flatpak.org) Flathub (https://flathub.org/home) Publishing requirements for the Elementary AppStore (https://docs.elementary.io/develop/appcenter/publishing-requirements) Elementary on the pi (https://blog.elementary.io/elementary-os-on-raspberry-pi/) Name - Elementary OS Base System - Ubuntu LTS Desktop Environment - Pantheon File Manager - Files Package Manager - dpkg - apt Kernel - 5.11.0-34 as of today Display Manager - gala X11 - Project Leaders: Cassidy James Blaede and Danielle Foré Team Members (https://elementary.io/team) Housekeeping Ubuntu Unity Remix/Web Telegram group (https://t.me/ubuntuunitydiscuss) Email us - contact@linuxuserspace.show Linux User Space Discord Server (https://linuxuserspace.show/discord) Our Matrix room (https://linuxuserspace.show/matrix) Support us at Patreon (https://patreon.com/linuxuserspace) Join us on Telegram (https://linuxuserspace.show/telegram) Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/LinuxUserSpace) Watch us on YouTube (https://linuxuserspace.show/youtube) Or Watch us on Odysee (https://linuxuserspace.show/odysee) Check out our website https://linuxuserspace.show App Focus OpenSnitch This episode's app: * Opensnitch (https://github.com/evilsocket/opensnitch/wiki) Next Time With us trying out Elementary OS for this past month, that means our next show will be topic based. We have a few topics planned for you and all of them will affect you in the Linux User Space. Our next distro to check out is Garuda Linux (https://garudalinux.org) Join us in two weeks when we return to the Linux User Space Stay tuned on Twitter, Telegram, Matrix, Discord whatever. Join the conversation. Talk to us, and give us more ideas. We would like to acknowledge our top patrons. Thank you for your support! Contributor Nicholas CubicleNate LiNuXsys666 Co-Producer Donnie Johnny Producer Bruno John
Bill quits Manjaro and comments on documentation. We get more feedback on the Pinebook Pro, questions about browsers, and an additional alternative to LastPass. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #409 · Listener Feedback 01:18 Bill ends his grand Manjaro adventure 08:35 Nate: A new listener question 14:04 Michael: The Pinebook Pro 23:13 Liz: Comments on Manjaro 26:07 Bill's comments on support documentation 29:19 Liz: Dark Reader 32:31 David: What browser do you use? 36:25 Door: LessPass password manager 39:33 Jaan: Pinebook Pro positive update 40:39 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 41:51 End
Bill quits Manjaro and comments on documentation. We get more feedback on the Pinebook Pro, questions about browsers, and an additional alternative to LastPass. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #409 · Listener Feedback 01:18 Bill ends his grand Manjaro adventure 08:35 Nate: A new listener question 14:04 Michael: The Pinebook Pro 23:13 Liz: Comments on Manjaro 26:07 Bill's comments on support documentation 29:19 Liz: Dark Reader 32:31 David: What browser do you use? 36:25 Door: LessPass password manager 39:33 Jaan: Pinebook Pro positive update 40:39 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 41:51 End
About Pine64 None of us is as smart as all of us Ken H. Blanchard At the core of our philosophy is the notion that PINE64 is a community platform. A simplistic point of view, often offered up and referenced online, is that ‘PINE64 does hardware while the community does the software’. While this depiction is not inaccurate, it is also a gross oversimplification. The fact that PINE64 is community driven doesn’t simply entail a one-way reliance on the community or partner projects for software support; it means that the community gets to actively shape the devices, as well as the social platform, of PINE64 from the ground up. The goal is to deliver ARM64 devices that you really wish to engage with and a platform that you want to be a part of. As such, the community – PINE64 – and the company PINE Microsystems Inc. are interlocked and intertwined, but separate entities. What does it mean in practice then? It means that we usually announce what we’re working on well ahead of the shipping date – many months before a device is released – so that you have plenty of time to request product features, suggest changes, ask for/make changes to documentation, etc. before the first iteration of the device rolls of the factory line. It also means that the hardware developments – successes and failures alike – are all in the open. You can follow the process on our forum, the IRC, Discord, Matrix, Telegram the online conversations log and, in some instances, on our partner projects forums. But it also means that anyone who is a part of the community gets to shape anything related to the PINE64 project – including the Wiki or this website – and so, software development is only one area where you can contribute your time and skill. In return for time investment, the community gets fair priced devices that developers wish to spend their time on. Last, but not least, is our belief in supporting existing SoCs for long periods of time as well as actively developing new devices based on those SOCs. What does this mean for developers then? It means that a developer can start developing software on a PINE64 SBC and, in time, support multiple devices with relative ease. This device convergence is, at the time of writing, most pronounced on the Allwinner A64 SOC used in a number of our devices including the: PINE64-LTS, SOPine, Pinebook and Pinetab. That said, similar convergence is also planned for the Rockchip RK3399, currently used on the RockPro64 and in the Pinebook Pro. You can always find us in the chats or the forum, so if you have any further questions make sure to drop by and ask about how the PINE64 project actually works.
Our listeners talk about Laptops for Linux: Dell Latitude E557, Pinebook Pro, and Juno Computers, we hear about Strawberry music player, Garuda Linux and a WTF moment. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #407 · Listener Feedback 00:58 Waiting for the Ubuntus 02:17 Liz: About the Dell Latitude E557 with Manjaro 04:23 Liz: Manjaro experience 06:44 DoorToDoor Geek: A positive Pinebook Pro review 10:48 Ben: Strawberry: A Linux-based music player that streams Tidal 11:39 Michael: Buying a Linux laptop 15:48 Carlos: Garuda Linux 19:05 Highlander: WTF moment 26:59 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 28:35 End
Our listeners talk about Laptops for Linux: Dell Latitude E557, Pinebook Pro, and Juno Computers, we hear about Strawberry music player, Garuda Linux and a WTF moment. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #407 · Listener Feedback 00:58 Waiting for the Ubuntus 02:17 Liz: About the Dell Latitude E557 with Manjaro 04:23 Liz: Manjaro experience 06:44 DoorToDoor Geek: A positive Pinebook Pro review 10:48 Ben: Strawberry: A Linux-based music player that streams Tidal 11:39 Michael: Buying a Linux laptop 15:48 Carlos: Garuda Linux 19:05 Highlander: WTF moment 26:59 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 28:35 End
Our listeners are FANTASTIC! We mentioned in our episode related to hardware designed to run Linux that neither of us has had any experience with the Pinebook Pro. We ask for feedback from any listeners who have used the Pinebook Pro. So they wrote reviews. Here they are. Thanks to Tim and Stacey for all the work they put into these reviews. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #406 · Pinebook Pro Reviews 01:04 Larry is wrapping-up the Ubuntu MATE Guide for the 21.04 release 02:58 Pinebook pro 05:23 Tim: Experiences with using the Pinebook Pro 06:18 Is the Pinebook Pro a viable low-cost laptop for anyone? 06:59 Pinebook Pro quirks and limitations 08:21 Why does the Pinebook Pro work for me? 09:21 It's great for using when traveling 09:59 About the OS and software 11:17 About the hardware and accessories 13:05 Summary: Limited and slow, maybe a Chromebook alternative 15:21 Stacey: A review of Pine's customer support 17:18 Ordering the Pinebook Pro 18:13 Unboxing the Pinebook Pro 18:40 Attempting to get support from Pine 21:08 Finding a fix without any help from Pine 22:12 A scorned customer 23:07 Our final words on the Pinebook Pro 34:03 End
Our listeners are FANTASTIC! We mentioned in our episode related to hardware designed to run Linux that neither of us has had any experience with the Pinebook Pro. We ask for feedback from any listeners who have used the Pinebook Pro. So they wrote reviews. Here they are. Thanks to Tim and Stacey for all the work they put into these reviews. Episode Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #406 · Pinebook Pro Reviews 01:04 Larry is wrapping-up the Ubuntu MATE Guide for the 21.04 release 02:58 Pinebook pro 05:23 Tim: Experiences with using the Pinebook Pro 06:18 Is the Pinebook Pro a viable low-cost laptop for anyone? 06:59 Pinebook Pro quirks and limitations 08:21 Why does the Pinebook Pro work for me? 09:21 It's great for using when traveling 09:59 About the OS and software 11:17 About the hardware and accessories 13:05 Summary: Limited and slow, maybe a Chromebook alternative 15:21 Stacey: A review of Pine's customer support 17:18 Ordering the Pinebook Pro 18:13 Unboxing the Pinebook Pro 18:40 Attempting to get support from Pine 21:08 Finding a fix without any help from Pine 22:12 A scorned customer 23:07 Our final words on the Pinebook Pro 34:03 End
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we've got some big releases to talk about such as GNOME releasing of the anticipated GNOME 40. We've also got some distro news with Fedora 34 Beta, we're going to talk about openSUSE's MicroOS distro, and we'll also check out the latest release of KaOS Linux. In hardware news, Pine64 has announces that pre-orders for the Pinebook Pro are coming soon. System76 has announced their new Pangolin laptop which is a high anticipated AMD-Powered Laptop. We'll also check out the latest release of OpenRazer which is a project to make Razer products work with Linux based systems. Then later in the show, we'll check out some news that might make Linux Get A Bit RUSTy and we'll check out the latest release of the man-pages project with 5.11. There's also some big news related to Richard Stallman being back on FSF Board of Directors, so I guess we'll talk about that. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! SPONSORED BY: Digital Ocean ►► https://do.co/dln Bitwarden ►► https://bitwarden.com/dln TWITTER ►► https://twitter.com/michaeltunnell MASTODON ►► https://mastodon.social/@MichaelTunnell DLN COMMUNITY ►► https://destinationlinux.network/contact FRONT PAGE LINUX ►► https://frontpagelinux.com MERCH ►► https://dlnstore.com BECOME A PATRON ►► https://tuxdigital.com/contribute This Week in Linux is produced by the Destination Linux Network: https://destinationlinux.network SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/twil144 00:00 = Welcome to TWIL 144 01:54 = GNOME 40 Released 10:28 = Fedora Linux 34 Beta Released 14:56 = openSUSE MicroOS Desktop with GNOME Reaches Beta 19:45 = Digital Ocean: VPS / App Platform ( https://do.co/dln ) 21:21 = Pinebook Pro Pre-Orders in April 25:16 = System76 Pangolin AMD-Powered Laptop 29:24 = OpenRazer 3.0 Released 31:35 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 34:01 = KDE Plasma 5.22 Getting Quick Settings 36:16 = KaOS Linux 2021.03 Released 40:21 = Linux Might Get A Bit RUSTy? 44:38 = man-pages 5.11 Released 46:49 = Microsoft Edge Sync Features on Linux 48:51 = Microsoft To Acquire Discord? (Rumor) 51:32 = Richard Stallman Back on FSF Board of Directors 57:05 = Outro Other Videos: 7 Reasons Why Firefox Is My Favorite Web Browser: https://youtu.be/bGTBH9yr8uw How To Use Firefox's Best Feature, Multi-Account Containers: https://youtu.be/FfN5L5zAJUo 5 Reasons Why I Use KDE Plasma: https://youtu.be/b0KA6IsO1M8 6 Cool Things You Didn't Know About Linux's History: https://youtu.be/u9ZY41mNB9I Thanks For Watching! Linux #TechNews #Podcast
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we’ve got some big releases to talk about such as GNOME releasing of the anticipated GNOME 40. We’ve also got some distro news with Fedora 34 Beta, we’re going to talk about openSUSE’s MicroOS distro, and we’ll also check out the latest release of KaOS Linux. In… Read more
Did Linux kill Commercial Unix, three node GlusterFS setup on FreeBSD, OpenBSD on the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano (1st Gen), NetBSD on EdgeRouter Lite, TLS Mastery first draft done NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) Headlines Did Linux Kill Commercial Unix? (https://www.howtogeek.com/440147/did-linux-kill-commercial-unix/) Sales of commercial Unix have fallen off a cliff. There has to be something behind this dramatic decline. Has Linux killed its ancestor by becoming a perfectly viable replacement, like an operating system version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers? Wireguard: Simple and Secure VPN in FreeBSD (https://klarasystems.com/articles/simple-and-secure-vpn-in-freebsd/) A great article by Tom Jones about setting up Wireguard on FreeBSD *** Setup a Three Node Replicated GlusterFS Cluster on FreeBSD (http://www.unibia.com/unibianet/freebsd/setup-three-node-replicated-glusterfs-cluster-freebsd) GlusterFS (GFS) is the open source equivalent to Microsoft's Distributed Filesystem (DFS). It's a service that replicates the contents of a filesystem in real time from one server to another. Clients connect to any server and changes made to a file will replicate automatically. It's similar to something like rsync or syncthing, but much more automatic and transparent. A FreeBSD port has been available since v3.4, and (as of this post) is currently at version 8.0 with 9.0 being released soon. News Roundup OpenBSD on the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano (1st Gen) (https://jcs.org/2021/01/27/x1nano) Lenovo has finally made a smaller version of its X1 Carbon, something I’ve been looking forward to for years. NetBSD on the EdgeRouter Lite (https://www.cambus.net/netbsd-on-the-edgerouter-lite/) NetBSD-current now has pre-built octeon bootable images (which will appear in NetBSD 10.0) for the evbmips port, so I decided to finally give it a try. I've been happily running OpenBSD/octeon on my EdgeRouter Lite for a few years now, and have previously published some notes including more detail about the CPU. “TLS Mastery” first draft done! (https://mwl.io/archives/9938) Beastie Bits A Thread on a FreeBSD Desktop for PineBook Pro (https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/freebsd-desktop-for-pinebook-pro.78269/) FOSSASIA Conference - March 2021(Virtual) (https://eventyay.com/e/fa96ae2c) WireGuard for pfSense Software (https://www.netgate.com/blog/wireguard-for-pfsense-software.html) NetBSD logo to going Moon (https://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-advocacy/2021/02/07/msg000849.html) *** ###Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. ### Producer's Note > Hey everybody, it’s JT here. After our AMA episode where I mentioned I was looking for older BSD Retail Copies, I was contacted by Andrew who hooked me up with a bunch of OpenBSD disks from the 4.x era. So shout out to him, and since that worked so well, I figured I'd give it another shot and ask that if anyone has any old Unixes that will run on an 8088, 8086, or 286 and you're willing to send me copies of the disks. I've recently dug out an old 286 system and I’d love to get a Unix OS on it. I know of Minix, Xenix and Microport, but I haven’t been able to find many versions of them. I've found Microport 1.3.3, and SCO Xenix... but that's about it. Let me know if you happen to have any other versions, or know where I can get them. Feedback/Questions Christian - ZFS replication and verification (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/390/feedback/Christian%20-%20ZFS%20replication%20and%20verification) Iain - progress (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/390/feedback/Iain%20-%20progress) Paul - APU2 device (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/390/feedback/Paul%20-%20APU2%20device) *** Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) ***
Dans cet épisode hivernal de 3d8plus4 nous parlons de mauvaises chances concernant les éviers, les félins, la température au Texas et les écrivains progressistes qui se révèlent être des merdes. Côté jeux vidéo, on jase de plein de trucs semi indy amusants : Halcyon6, TABAS, Noita et de deux classiques dans la force de l'âge (Sims 4 et Octopath Traveller). Luis nous parle ensuite d'un autre livre 'moyen dans le bon sens du terme' : Runebinder avant qu'on jase un peu de la série The Stand, basée sur le roman de Stephen King et que Dan nous fasse l'éloge du documentaire 'The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel' sur le mystère (résolu!) de Elisa Lam. Nous terminons l'épisode en jasant techno - la petite merveille qu'est le site Snapdrop; le futur possible de Jeep Wranglers plugin hybrides... Et la mort soudaine et inattendue du Pinebook Pro de Dan.Newsy News:Texaspocalypse 2021Halcyon6 (Gratuit sur EPIC)Joss Whedon... Wtf...Jeux Vidéo:The Sims 4 ($5 sur Origins)TABS (Steam)Noita (Steam)Octopath Traveller (Switch)Livres:Runebinder - Alex KahlerTV:The StandCrime Scene - The Vanishing at the Cecil HotelTech:Snapdrop.netJeep Wrangler Plugin Hybride?RIP Pinebook ProQuestions, commentaires: 3d8plus4@gmail.com
On this episode of The Linux Cast, Martin and Matt talk about the process and dangers of Dual Booting Linux with Windows, and whether or not it's worth it to do so. Contact Info Contact Info Twitter: @thelinuxcast @mtwb @martintwit2you Subscribe at http://thelinuxcast.org Contact us thelinuxcast@gmail.com http://facebook.com/thelinuxcast Subscribe on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCylGUf9BvQooEFjgdNudoQg What have we been up to Linux related this Week? Martin – I have installed Manjaro Arm KDE on my Pinebook Pro Matt – I've been theming BSPWM and refining my i3 config files. Also, learning OBS Links (One each) Martin – https://kde.org/announcements/pinephone-plasma-mobile-edition/ Matt – https://9to5linux.com/system76-launches-new-galago-pro-linux-laptop-with-11th-gen-intel-core-cpus Main Topic – Dual Booting Apps of the Week Martin – Rambox https://rambox.pro/#home Matt – tg
On this week's episode of DLN Xtend we discuss affordable Linux hardware. Welcome to episode 34 of DLN Xtend. DLN Xtend is a community-powered podcast. We take conversations from the DLN Community from places like the DLN Discourse Forums, Telegram group, Discord server, and more. We also take topics from other shows around the network to give our takes. 00:00 Introductions 10:00 Topic: Affordable Linux Hardware 26:22 Host Related Interest 41:06 Wrap Up Matt- Game Vengeance- https://store.steampowered.com/app/384960/Vengeance/ Wendy- https://discourse.destinationlinux.network/t/my-photo-editing-workflow/2640/2 Jason- My Virtual Mission, Mission To Xyxx Join us in the DLN Community: Discourse: https://discourse.destinationlinux.network/ Telegram: https://destinationlinux.org/telegram Mumble: https://destinationlinux.network/mumble/ Discord: https://destinationlinux.org/discord servers to continue the discussion! Contact info Jason (Twitter @KillYourFM) Matt (Twitter @MattDLN) Wendy (Instagram @LinuxandLifts) Nate (cubiclenate.com) Special Guest: Jason Evangelho.
This week on BDLL! We get updated on what everybody has been doing. We talk about Barbara's issues with her PineBook Pro and we deep dive into Add-ons for browsers for our BDLL App List BDLL
As "lucky" Season 13 comes to a close, Robbie takes us through installing Debian 11 (Bullseye) on a Pinebook Pro. We've also got our hands on a die-cast 10-inch model of The Orville ship, which is available now at comic book stores and online. Robbie will get into the box and take a look at this stunning set piece. Robert has cryptocurrency news and explains impermanent loss, and Bekah's here with the news stories we're following. Read the complete show notes, comment or rate this episode, view pictures and obtain links from this episode at https://category5.tv/shows/technology/episode/663/ Running time: 1 Hour 34 Seconds
This week we’ve been playing Fall Guys. We discuss the Pinebook Pro and Pine Phone (we have hardware), bring you some command line love and respond to your wonderful feedback. It’s Season 13 Episode 24 of the Ubuntu Podcast! Alan… Read more ›
Bill is still on Manjaro! The Ubuntu MATE Guide is now available online. We answer questions about MeWe, dual booting, fresh install, replacing a sheet feed scanner, System76, Crossover, and LibreOffice spell check. Episode 395 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #395 · Listener Feedback 01:09 Ubuntu MATE Guide available online 03:34 Bill pauses his distrohopping, explores Vivaldi browser on Manjaro 06:49 Daniel: Help with MeWe and screen reader 08:55 George: Thank you 09:38 George: Dual booting for Mike 16:06 Nathan: Fresh Install 21:24 David: Replacing a sheet feed scanner 25:46 Reid: System76 and Thinkpads 31:25 David: Manjaro and Crossover 33:51 Tim: LibreOffice spellcheck not working on Manjaro on Pinebook Pro 35:56 Next episode 37:07 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 38:16 End
Bill is still on Manjaro! The Ubuntu MATE Guide is now available online. We answer questions about MeWe, dual booting, fresh install, replacing a sheet feed scanner, System76, Crossover, and LibreOffice spell check. Episode 395 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #395 · Listener Feedback 01:09 Ubuntu MATE Guide available online 03:34 Bill pauses his distrohopping, explores Vivaldi browser on Manjaro 06:49 Daniel: Help with MeWe and screen reader 08:55 George: Thank you 09:38 George: Dual booting for Mike 16:06 Nathan: Fresh Install 21:24 David: Replacing a sheet feed scanner 25:46 Reid: System76 and Thinkpads 31:25 David: Manjaro and Crossover 33:51 Tim: LibreOffice spellcheck not working on Manjaro on Pinebook Pro 35:56 Next episode 37:07 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 38:16 End
The past, present and future of Linux on Arm. The major challenges still facing full Linux support, and why ServerReady might be a solution to unify Arm systems. Plus we chat with the Manjaro team about recent changes. Chapters: 0:00 Pre-Show 0:58 Intro 2:01 Terminal 2.0 in ChromeOS 4:41 Manjaro's Process Problems 13:49 Manjaro Sneak Peaks 15:41 Weekend Manjaro Journey 21:02 Housekeeping 22:09 ARM on Linux 24:01 The History of ARM 28:16 Single Board Computing Revolution 31:47 ARM Reaching into the Present 33:17 The Future of ARM 36:42 Not Everyone Loves ARM 43:01 Wants and What Ifs 48:30 App Pick: tuptime 49:48 App Pick: s-tui 50:21 Outro 51:36 Post-Show Special Guests: Brent Gervais, Dalton Durst, Drew DeVore, Jeremy Soller, Marius Gripsgard, Neal Gompa, and Philip Muller.
Pop!_OS 20.04 LTS History System 76 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pop!_OS) To my knowledge the only PC manufacturer that also ships it's own Distro, other than Raspian/RasberryPiOS for Rasberry Pi's (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/06/linux-distro-review-system76s-ubuntu-based-pop_os/#:~:text=The%20subject%20of%20today's%20Linux,by%20a%20hardware%20OEM%20manufacturer.&text=Until%202017%2C%20System76%20sold%20its%20systems%20preinstalled%20with%20Ubuntu%20Linux.) Release Notes Pop!_OS 20.04 LTS (https://support.system76.com/articles/Pop!_OS-20.04-LTS-Release-Notes/) Extras In Chrome and Chromium, and possibly in others, the option Force Color Profile needs to be turned to sRGB (or probably other profiles) in chrome://flags for blues to be... not purple. Wine Dependencies (https://github.com/lutris/docs/blob/master/WineDependencies.md) Drivers (https://github.com/lutris/docs/blob/master/InstallingDrivers.md) Battle.net (https://github.com/lutris/docs/blob/master/Battle.Net.md) Support popOS here (https://pop.system76.com/) Housekeeping We want to hear from you! Send your questions and feedback to contact@linuxuserspace.show and we hope to read and discuss your message in an upcoming episode. Podcast showcase this week is Linux Headlines (https://linuxheadlines.show/) from Jupiter Broadcasting. In under 3 minutes you can get Linux and open source headlines every Monday, Wednesday, & Friday. Linux User Space Patreon (https://patreon.com/linuxuserspace) Twitter (https://twitter.com/linuxuserspace) Website (https://linuxuserspace.show) Current Events Ubuntu 19.10 Reaches End of Life This Month, Plan Those Upgrades Soon (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2020/07/ubuntu-19-10-end-of-life) Linux Hardware System76 Lemur Pro (https://system76.com/laptops/lemp9/configure) Tuxedo (https://www.tuxedocomputers.com/) Manjaro infinity book S (https://www.tuxedocomputers.com/de/Linux-Hardware/Linux-Notebooks/10-14-Zoll/Manjaro-InfinityBook-S-14-v5_1.tuxedo) Juno computers (https://junocomputers.com/product/jupiter-14-v3/) Lenovo Will Sell Ubuntu on More ThinkPads, ThinkStations This Summer (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2020/06/ubuntu-on-lenovo-laptops) Lenovo announced that all of its (https://news.lenovo.com/pressroom/press-releases/lenovo-brings-linux-certification-to-thinkpad-and-thinkstation-workstation-portfolio-easing-deployment-for-developers-data-scientists/) Kubuntu Focus on BDLL (https://kfocus.org/) Dell Blog for Linux Machines (https://bartongeorge.io/) dell.com/linux (https://www.dell.com/en-us/work/shop/overview/cp/linuxsystems) Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition Now Comes with Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2020/06/dell-xps-13-developer-edition-ubuntu-20-04) Now you can buy laptops with elementary OS pre-installed (https://liliputing.com/2020/06/now-you-can-buy-laptops-with-elementary-os-pre-installed-gnu-linux-distribution.html) MX Linux Now Comes Pre-Installed on Star Labs’ Linux Laptops (https://9to5linux.com/mx-linux-now-comes-pre-installed-on-star-labs-linux-laptops) StarLabs Mark IV (https://starlabs.systems/) Purism - Librem 14 (https://puri.sm/products/librem-14/) PineBook Pro (https://www.pine64.org/pinebook-pro/) App Focus Bashtop Bashtop (https://github.com/aristocratos/bashtop) git clone https://github.com/aristocratos/bashtop.git cd bashtop sudo make install To remove it, in the same directory, run: sudo make uninstall To add temperatures, make sure you install the lm-sensors package, and for disk usage, install the sysstat package so BashTOP can use iostat. sudo apt install lm-sensors sysstat Install from PPA (https://code.launchpad.net/~bashtop-monitor/+archive/ubuntu/bashtop) sudo add-apt-repository ppa:bashtop-monitor/bashtop sudo apt update sudo apt install bashtop Install from snap (https://snapcraft.io/bashtop) sudo snap install bashtop sudo snap connect bashtop:mount-observe sudo snap connect bashtop:network-control Thank you listening for your support, Join us in two weeks when we return to the Linux User Space
https://destinationlinux.org/episode-180 - Hosted by Noah, Michael & Ryan Coming up on this week's episode of Destination Linux, we've got some community feedback. We'll discuss Firefox's new VPN service but do we trust it? We share our thoughts on the latest release from Linux Mint, Linux Mint 20. We'll round out the show with our famous Picks of the Week with the Software Spotlight and our Tip of the Week. All that and so much more on this week's episode of Destination Linux. DL Hosts: Noah of Ask Noah Show = https://asknoahshow.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus Destination Linux Network Store = https://destinationlinux.network/store Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Topics covered in this episode: Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-180 00:00:00 Intro 00:00:24 Welcome to DL180 00:00:45 What Ryan has been up to . . . 00:02:07 What Michael has been up to . . . 00:04:24 What Noah has been up to . . . 00:04:38 Discussion: ProtonMail and their aim at Google's GSuite 00:06:42 Noah shows that his segues are legendary 00:07:00 Sponsored by Digital Ocean [ https://do.co/dln ] 00:09:07 Community Feedback about the Pinebook Pro and some issues with it 00:10:01 Ryan's response to the feedback 00:11:03 Noah's response to the feedback 00:12:14 DLN Forum & Telegram group are great places for tech help 00:12:45 News: Mozilla announces the Firefox VPN service 00:18:06 News: Linux Mint 20 Released 00:30:04 Main Topic: Matrix / Riot Might Be The Future of Communication 00:52:03 Linux Gaming: Ryan Gives Noah Suggestions for FPS Games on Linux 00:59:51 Software Spotlight: Tux Typing 01:01:14 Tip of the Week: Increase Your Terminal History Size 01:03:16 Outro 01:03:24 Get More DL by Becoming a Patron 01:04:20 DLN Store [ https://destinationlinux.network/store ] 01:04:55 How to Join the DLN Community 01:04:58 Noah's delivery of this part is totally lit 01:05:40 Destination Linux Network [ https://destinationlinux.network ] 01:06:00 FrontPageLinux.com [ https://frontpagelinux.com ] 01:06:15 Patron Post Show (become a Patron to Join us each week!) Linux #OpenSource #Podcast
Will reminisces about netbooks, Joe has a new Pinebook Pro, Facebook’s complex morals, Bountysource worries the community, and KDE Korner. News Facebook did a bad thing to do a good thing Bountysource was going to change its terms so it could keep unclaimed bounties but then backtracked Xfce considers leaving Admin If you... Read More
Will reminisces about netbooks, Joe has a new Pinebook Pro, Facebook’s complex morals, Bountysource worries the community, and KDE Korner. News Facebook did a bad thing to do a good thing Bountysource was going to change its terms so it could keep unclaimed bounties but then backtracked Xfce considers leaving Admin If you... Read More
Pedro gets most of his Pinebook Pro! Dealing with SystemD in 2020, Haiku beta 2 is out, and Ubuntu wants to transform your Pi.
FreeBSD 11.4-RC 2 available, OpenBSD 6.7 on a PineBook Pro 64, How OpenZFS Keeps Your Data Safe, Bringing FreeBSD to EC2, FreeBSD 2020 Community Survey, and more. NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/) Headlines FreeBSD 11.4-RC2 Now Available (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2020-May/092320.html) The second RC build of the 11.4-RELEASE release cycle is now available. + 11.4-RELEASE notes (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.4R/relnotes.html) (still in progress at the time of recording) Install OpenBSD 6.7-current on a PineBook Pro 64 (https://xosc.org/pinebookpro.html) This document is work in progress and I'll update the date above once I change something. If you have something to add, remarks, etc please contact me. Preferably via Mastodon but other means of communication are also fine. News Roundup Understanding How OpenZFS Keeps Your Data Safe (https://www.ixsystems.com/blog/openzfs-keeps-your-data-safe/) Veteran technology writer Jim Salter wrote an excellent guide on the ZFS file system’s features and performance that we absolutely had to share. There’s plenty of information in the article for ZFS newbies and advanced users alike. Be sure to check out the article over at Ars Technica to learn more about ZFS concepts including pools, vdevs, datasets, snapshots, and replication, just to name a few. Bringing FreeBSD to ec2 (https://www.lastweekinaws.com/podcast/screaming-in-the-cloud/bringing-freebsd-to-ec2-with-colin-percival/) Colin is the founder of Tarsnap, a secure online backup service which combines the flexibility and scriptability of the standard UNIX "tar" utility with strong encryption, deduplication, and the reliability of Amazon S3 storage. Having started work on Tarsnap in 2006, Colin is among the first generation of users of Amazon Web Services, and has written dozens of articles about his experiences with AWS on his blog. FreeBSD 2020 Community Survey (https://www.research.net/r/freebsd-2020-community-survey) The FreeBSD Core Team invites you to complete the 2020 FreeBSD Community Survey. The purpose of this survey is to collect quantitative data from the public in order to help guide the project’s priorities and efforts. This is only the second time a survey has been conducted by the FreeBSD Project and your input is valued. The survey will remain open for 14 days and will close on June 16th at 17:00 UTC (Tuesday 10am PDT). Beastie Bits FreeBSD Project Proposals (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/submit-your-freebsd-project-proposal) TJ Hacking (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCknj_nW8JWcFJOAbgd5_Zgw) Scotland Open Source podcast (https://twitter.com/ScotlandOSUM/status/1265987126321188864?s=19) Next FreeBSD Office Hours on June 24, 2020 (https://wiki.freebsd.org/OfficeHours) *** Feedback/Questions Tom - Writing for LPIrstudio (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/354/feedback/Tom%20-%20Wriitng%20for%20LPI.md) Luke - rstudio (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/354/feedback/Luke%20-%20rstudio.md) Matt - Vlans and Jails (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/354/feedback/Matt%20-%20Vlans%20and%20Jails.md) Morgan - Can I get some commentary on this issue (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/354/feedback/Morgan%20-%20Can%20I%20get%20some%20commentary%20on%20this%20issue.md) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv)
From the low-end to the high-end we try out both ends of the Linux hardware spectrum. Wes reviews the latest XPS 13, and Chris shares his thoughts on the Pinebook Pro.
For the first time, we open our MikroTik router series up to viewers for questions and comments. Robbie also addresses a couple of the major issues affecting the latest run of Pinebook Pro laptops, and shows a web service that provides a fun yet functional typewriter simulation. Bekah's here for the news, and Robert joins us with Crypto Corner. Read the complete show notes, comment or rate this episode, view pictures and obtain links from this episode at https://category5.tv/shows/technology/episode/653/ Running time: 53 Minutes 32 Seconds
From the low-end to the high-end we try out both ends of the Linux hardware spectrum. Wes reviews the latest XPS 13, and Chris shares his thoughts on the Pinebook Pro. Plus a really cool new feature in Linux 5.7, and we get some answers to the recent GNOME patent settlement from the source. Special Guests: Dan Johansen and Drew DeVore.
The Linux kernel packs version 5.7 with exciting additions, version 2.2 of the Foliate eBook reader is out with support for many more formats, and members of the Association of American Publishers sue the Internet Archive over their library lending practices.
In den letzten Wochen hat sich einiges an Themen angesammelt, in denen wir nicht dazu gekommen sind darüber zu sprechen. Was das alles ist und warum es solange gedauert hat, erfahrt Ihr in Episode 21. Elgato Green Screen - https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/green-screen-mt Doppel Monitor Arm - https://northbayouav.com/product/monitor-mount-arm-2/ Klopapier-Blitzrechner: https://www.blitzrechner.de/toilettenpapier/ Ille Papier Service - https://www.ille.de/ Google Stadia ist verfügbar für jeden - https://stadia.google.com/home Bandbreite bei Stadia - https://venturebeat.com/2019/11/19/google-stadia-data-usage/ Digital Foundry zu Grafikkarten und Techniken - https://www.youtube.com/user/DigitalFoundry Pinebook - pine64 - https://www.pine64.org/pinebook/ Pinebook Pro - pine64 - https://www.pine64.org/pinebook-pro/ CamelCamelCamel Preisvergleich - https://de.camelcamelcamel.com/ VNC - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_Network_Computing RealVNC für RaspberryPi - https://www.realvnc.com/de/connect/download/vnc/raspberrypi/ OpenStreetmap Planet.osm - https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Planet.osm Overpass API - https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Overpass_API Overpass Turbo - selbst ausprobieren - http://overpass-turbo.eu/ SciFi Buchreihe Chatempfehlung - Ramez Naam - Nexus Trilogy - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nexus_Trilogy SciFi Buchreihe Chatempfehlung - Markus Heitz - Collector Reihe - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markus_Heitz
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're going to be talking about some new releases from Firefox and Darktable. We've got a bunch of Distro News this week related to Manjaro, Mabox Linux, LibreELEC, Clonezilla, NuTyX, and Arya Linux. Then we're going to talk about what the Open Source community is doing to help fight the COVID-19 virus. Later in the show, we'll look at the security issues found for AMD and Intel hardware. Then we'll finish out the show with some great deals in the latest Humble Bundles. 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://michaeltunnell.com - https://tuxdigital.com/linuxiseverywhere - https://tuxdigital.com/linuxiseverywhereeu Segment Index: Show Notes - https://tuxdigital.com/twinl97 00:01:05 = Sponsored by Digital Ocean ( https://do.co/dln ) 00:02:33 = Firefox 74 Released 00:07:20 = Darktable 3.0.1 Released 00:10:41 = Open Source is Helping Fight COVID-19 00:15:21 = Manjaro on Pinebook Pro + More 00:18:40 = Mabox Linux 20.02 Released 00:20:26 = LibreELEC 9.2.1 Released 00:23:45 = Sickness Update: I'm Good, Mostly 00:25:10 = TuxDigital & TWinL on LBRY 00:26:41 = LBRY CEO Interview on Destination Linux 00:28:59 = Become a Patron of TuxDigital & TWinL 00:30:47 = Clonezilla Live 2.6.5-21 Released 00:32:45 = NuTyX 11.4 Released 00:34:59 = AryaLinux 2.4 Released 00:37:28 = AMD's 'Take A Way' Security Issue 00:41:00 = Intel's LVI Security Issue 00:48:14 = Humble Bundles: Games & Books 00:53:21 = Outro
Manjaro KDE is now the default OS on the Pinebook Pro, GitHub announces the acquisition of npm, Google has a new library aimed at simplifying infinite-width neural networks, and the winners of this year's Free Software Awards.
Manjaro KDE is now the default OS on the Pinebook Pro, GitHub announces the acquisition of npm, Google has a new library aimed at simplifying infinite-width neural networks, and the winners of this year's Free Software Awards.
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we’re going to be talking about some new releases from Firefox and Darktable. We’ve got a bunch of Distro News this week related to Manjaro, Mabox Linux, LibreELEC, Clonezilla, NuTyX, and Arya Linux. Then we’re going to talk about what the Open Source community is doing to… Read more
Tunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – https://www.youtube.com/user/Doortodoorgeek/videos Patreon – http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Discord Link – https://discord.gg/sbeUC9b Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Thank you William DuPuie Links: Hi, I’ve […]
The first batch of Pinebook Pro ANSI (US Keyboard Layout) Linux laptops has shipped. At just $200 and coming with Debian Linux pre-installed, we really want to get a close look at this groundbreaking daily driver of a laptop from Pine64. Read the complete show notes, comment or rate this episode, view pictures and obtain links from this episode at https://category5.tv/shows/technology/episode/641/ Running time: 1 Hour 12 Minutes 34 Seconds
The Pinebook pro has arrived and Noah gives his initial impressions. SHA-1 is broken in a new way thats cheaper and easier.
The Pinebook pro has arrived and Noah gives his initial impressions. SHA-1 is broken in a new way thats cheaper and easier. -- 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/163) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #AskNoahShow on Freenode! -- 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)
The Pinebook pro has arrived and Noah gives his initial impressions. SHA-1 is broken in a new way thats cheaper and easier.
Tunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – https://www.youtube.com/user/Doortodoorgeek/videos Patreon – http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Discord Link – https://discord.gg/n9nCTT Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Thank you William DuPuie Links: Get Ready […]
This week we cover a discussion of tax preparation software from the DLN Discourse forum, discuss the ramifications of Private Internet Access being purchased by Kape Technologies, what IPFire is and how Nate is using it, a creator's perspective on the Brave browser rewards program, and DasGeek's experience with the Pinebook Pro. Please stop by the DLN Discourse, Telegram, Mumble and Discord to continue the discussion. We know you are busy and appreciate you taking time out of your day to listen to our podcast. Thank you!
The Pinebook Pro gets put through the travel test, while we get an update on Pine64 projects straight from the source. Plus a few surpises from the System76 Super Fan event. Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar, Brent Gervais, and Lukasz Erecinski.
The Pinebook Pro gets put through the travel test, while we get an update on Pine64 projects straight from the source.
In this episode we cover Weekly events, recap the first ever DLN game night, pine over the PinePhone preorder, Nate gives his account of being on the Ask Noah Show, Linux for Everyone's take on Living Your Life to the Fullest and how the Linux community plays a part, openSUSE votes on a name change, Linus Torvalds says he's no longer a programmer, and DasGeek's intial take on the Pinebook Pro and software availability for ARM. Please stop by the DLN Discourse, Telegram, Mumble and Discord to continue the discussion. We know you are busy and appreciate you taking time out of your day to listen to our podcast. Thank you!
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we take a look a few distros that were released with Fedora 31, MX Linux 19, and Tails 4.0. GNOME files a counter-claim against the patent troll that is suing Shotwell and we’ll take a look at the NordVPN hack. Mozilla released Firefox 70 and UBports released… Read more
Dell expands their linux hardware lineup, why elementary OS's Flatpak support sets the bar, and we chat with Christian Schaller of Red Hat about Fedora 31 and what's around the corner. Plus an update on Ubuntu on the Raspberry Pi 4 and a pick that's just for Wes. Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar, Brent Gervais, Cassidy James Blaede, Christian F.K. Schaller, Daniel Fore, and Martin Wimpress.
Microsoft has announced the release of Edge for Linux! Great news or is there a deeper discussion about too much choice? The Pinebook Pro is taking orders RIGHT NOW and a new version of Fedora is out! -- 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/152) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #AskNoahShow on Freenode! -- 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)
Microsoft has announced the release of Edge for Linux! Great news or is there a deeper discussion about too much choice? The Pinebook Pro is taking orders RIGHT NOW and a new version of Fedora is out!
Yunohost 3.7 Testing asking for feedback We just released a new testing version for YunoHost and would be happy to receive feedback before releasing it as a stable version :yum: This release includes quite important changes in YunoHost's internal, and therefore requires careful validation to minimize the amount of remaining bugs. Major changes are: Group and permission mechanism Improvements to detect app installs that broke critical parts of the system. Scarier wornings for dangerous app installs Message imporvement, string cleaning and a language rework Removing etckeeper Improved translations for Cataln, Occitan, French, Esperanto, Arabic, German, Spanish, Norwegian Bokmal, Portuguese and Swedish. Tor - New campaign, Take back the internet BTW I am considering putting up a tor version of Bonehea Media. What do you think? Pine64 announces round 2 of pre orders for the Pinebook Pro on 2019-11-05 if anybody is interested in buying me one I would graciously accept it! The original $99 Pinebook will take orders in early 2020. Want some free swag? November is LibreOffice month! Some Scary Ass Headlines! Null Byte - Finding passwords in log files with Google Dorks Redhat - 3 ways to reduce your attack surface on Linux Hacker News - 5 places where hackers are stealing your data Hacker News - New Chrome 0-day Bug is under active attacks-update now!!! Hacker News - Leading web domain name registrars disclose data breach Hacker News - Chinese hackers compromise telecom servers to spy on sms I ran search for Open Source password managers and came up with theses. Bitwarden - self hosted or use someone else KeePass - Desktop KeepassX - Fork of KeePass KeeWeb - Self hosted I'm gonna try KeePass and use KeeWeb on my Yunohost! Will report on this in a month. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/landp/message
The FSF is looking for some direction, StackStorm joins the Linux Foundation, and GNOME users who like it a little traditional get some good news. Plus the Pinebook Pro starts shipping to customers, and more.
https://destinationlinux.org/episode-137 - Hosted by Noah, Michael, Ryan, & Zeb Special Guest Interview: Emma Marshall of System76 = https://system76.com Quick Links: Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Ko-fi = https://destinationlinux.org/kofi Order Destination Linux Apparel = https://teespring.com/destinationlinuxpodcast Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Topics covered in this episode: Full Show Notes = https://destinationlinux.org/episode-137 Emails from Unklebonehead & Rhett Microsoft Brings exFAT to Linux Pinebook Pro Available Now Gamepad Support Comes To Linux In Steam Proton Software Spotlight: Photoflare is a cross-platform image editor (recommended by a member of our community Dark1) Tips & Tricks: - Keep your data safe on the cloud! - Privacy is important! Nothing is better to protect privacy than encryption. - Containers: EncFS / CryFS - KDE Vaults & CLI
Sponsored by: do.co/dl Special Guest Interview: Emma Marshall of System76 = https://system76.com Hosts of Destination Linux: Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss Want to Support the Show? Support on Patreon or on Ko-Fi Order Destination Linux Apparel Want to […]
More Android apps containing malware? Telegram’s cryptocurrency is finally going to be unleashed? There’s going to be a ‘Matrix 4’?!?!?! All that, and much, much more… Opening Audio: https://youtu.be/HFvT_qEZJf8 THE ZOMIA ONE PODCAST NETWORK IS LIVE! SWITCH YOUR FEED: http://zomiaone.com The Foreplay: --I will be at the LastPass event in Boston (https://www.lastpass.com/cybersecurity-unlocked-2019), Google killing YouTube Messenger on 9/18 (https://bit.ly/2MJ9hNR), Google officially named Android 10...Android 10, Pinebook Pro is now available for sale for $199 to everyone (https://bit.ly/2MIMXnE), 2015 BLOCKS modular watch is now cancelled (https://bit.ly/346Ixfs), Using Google Assistant, Alexa, or Siri to call businesses could connect you to scammers instead (https://bit.ly/2NzG2wx). Story of the Week: --”Android App Malware Mess” Link: https://bit.ly/2Zy0J2f This Week in Blockchain: --”Telegram’s Gram May Finally Be Coming” Link: https://bit.ly/30HCmfJ The Climax: --”The Matrix 4” Link: https://bit.ly/30nuiRc APPENDIX & SPONSORS: --”BlueChew.com & Use Code ‘TECH’” Link: https://bluechew.com/ --”Blocktap.io” Link: https://www.blocktap.io/ --”BlockchainAcrossAmerica.com” Link: https://www.blockchainacrossamerica.com/ --”Listen to Free Talk Live” Link: https://www.freetalklive.com --”Use Fastmail!” Link: https://fastmail.sovryntech.com --”Use Booking.com and Earn $25!” Link: https://booking.sovryntech.com --“Sign Up for the Sovryn Tech Newsletter” Link: https://zog.email --"Buy the Insurgo PrivacyBeast X230!” Link: http://bit.ly/2GoFjdj --"Surveillance Self-Defense" Link: https://ssd.eff.org/ --"RetroShare" Link: http://retroshare.net/ --“Books of Liberty” Link: http://booksofliberty.com/ --"Dark Android: 2017 Edition" Link: http://darkandroid.info --”Sovryn Universe, Vol. 1” Link: https://amzn.to/2MrvfEy -------------------------------------------------------------------------Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntech Donate with Crypto! BTC: 3K7UckYuEFWZLABfJktqxqPbgajYZTEzNW Zcash Address: t1MrX6XtS8Mhs6P4fW39d5PaWJ4jqguBY4Z Donate with PayPal! Link: http://donate.zog.ninja Donate with our Amazon Wish List! Link: http://wishlist.zog.ninja -------------------------------------------------------------------------You can e-mail the show at: bbs@sovryntech.com-------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovNet Or just go to: http://irc.zog.ninja -------------------------------------------------------------------------http://sovryntech.com https://twitter.com/sovryntech
More Android apps containing malware? Telegram’s cryptocurrency is finally going to be unleashed? There’s going to be a ‘Matrix 4’?!?!?! All that, and much, much more… Opening Audio: https://youtu.be/HFvT_qEZJf8 THE ZOMIA ONE PODCAST NETWORK IS LIVE! SWITCH YOUR FEED: http://zomiaone.com The Foreplay: --I will be at the LastPass event in Boston (https://www.lastpass.com/cybersecurity-unlocked-2019), Google killing YouTube Messenger on 9/18 (https://bit.ly/2MJ9hNR), Google officially named Android 10...Android 10, Pinebook Pro is now available for sale for $199 to everyone (https://bit.ly/2MIMXnE), 2015 BLOCKS modular watch is now cancelled (https://bit.ly/346Ixfs), Using Google Assistant, Alexa, or Siri to call businesses could connect you to scammers instead (https://bit.ly/2NzG2wx). Story of the Week: --”Android App Malware Mess” Link: https://bit.ly/2Zy0J2f This Week in Blockchain: --”Telegram’s Gram May Finally Be Coming” Link: https://bit.ly/30HCmfJ The Climax: --”The Matrix 4” Link: https://bit.ly/30nuiRc APPENDIX & SPONSORS: --”BlueChew.com & Use Code ‘TECH’” Link: https://bluechew.com/ --”Blocktap.io” Link: https://www.blocktap.io/ --”BlockchainAcrossAmerica.com” Link: https://www.blockchainacrossamerica.com/ --”Listen to Free Talk Live” Link: https://www.freetalklive.com --”Use Fastmail!” Link: https://fastmail.sovryntech.com --”Use Booking.com and Earn $25!” Link: https://booking.sovryntech.com --“Sign Up for the Sovryn Tech Newsletter” Link: https://zog.email --"Buy the Insurgo PrivacyBeast X230!” Link: http://bit.ly/2GoFjdj --"Surveillance Self-Defense" Link: https://ssd.eff.org/ --"RetroShare" Link: http://retroshare.net/ --“Books of Liberty” Link: http://booksofliberty.com/ --"Dark Android: 2017 Edition" Link: http://darkandroid.info --”Sovryn Universe, Vol. 1” Link: https://amzn.to/2MrvfEy -------------------------------------------------------------------------Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntech Donate with Crypto! BTC: 3K7UckYuEFWZLABfJktqxqPbgajYZTEzNW Zcash Address: t1MrX6XtS8Mhs6P4fW39d5PaWJ4jqguBY4Z Donate with PayPal! Link: http://donate.zog.ninja Donate with our Amazon Wish List! Link: http://wishlist.zog.ninja -------------------------------------------------------------------------You can e-mail the show at: bbs@sovryntech.com-------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovNet Or just go to: http://irc.zog.ninja -------------------------------------------------------------------------http://sovryntech.com https://twitter.com/sovryntech
Safely host your own password database using totally open source software. We cover BitWarden, our top choice to solve this problem. Plus we announce a new show we're super proud of, and chat with Dan Lynch from OggCamp. Special Guests: Alan Pope, Alex Kretzschmar, Brent Gervais, Dan Lynch, and Ell Marquez.
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we’ve got a couple birthdays to celebrate with one being the Linux kernel itself and Valve’s Steam Play (Proton) project. IBM announced some great news regarding their open source efforts (POWER), UBports announced OTA-10 of Ubuntu Touch, the Pinebook Pro public preorders have arrived, DELL announced their… Read more
This week on BDLL! We will give our thoughts on our bi-weekly distro challenge which is Regolith Linux (https://regolith-linux.org/). A big thank you to Ken Gilmer the creator of Regolith for making time to join us on the show and answer our questions about Regolith. We discuss the new products from Pine64 (https://www.pine64.org/) and get some info on the PinePhone (https://www.pine64.org/pinephone/), PineTab (https://www.pine64.org/pinetab/) and Pinebook Pro (https://www.pine64.org/pinebook-pro/) from ZeebedeeBoss who was at the latest meetup (https://www.pine64.org/2019/08/19/its-time-to-start-giving-back/) from the creator of the Pine products We also talk about the Barton George interview (https://pca.st/tG6oLU#t=505.0) from Jason Evangelho (https://twitter.com/killyourfm)'s podcast Linux for Everyone (https://linuxforeveryone.fireside.fm/) talking about Dell's Sputnik Project (https://bartongeorge.io/). Want to join us? You can download zoom (www.zoom.us) and install it and join the meeting via BDLL Link (https://.bigdaddylinux.com/zoom) This was a multi-stream using ReStream (https://restream.io/) so you can watch it on Youtube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtZRKfyvx7GUEi-Lr7f4Nxg?) or on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/bigdaddylinux)! Check out the BDL website (https://bigdaddylinux.com/) for more info. Join in on the discussions in the Discourse Forums (https://discourse.bigdaddylinux.com/) Join the discussion during the week in our telegram group (https://www.bigdaddylinux.com/telegram) Join us on Discord (https://www.bigdaddylinux.com/discord) Links for people who join BDLL can be found on the Community Page (https://www.bigdaddylinux.com/community)
The UNIX Philosophy in 2019, why use package managers, touchpad interrupted, Porting wine to amd64 on NetBSD second evaluation report, Enhancing Syzkaller Support for NetBSD, all about the Pinebook Pro, killing a process and all of its descendants, fast software the best software, and more. Headlines The UNIX Philosophy in 2019 (https://triosdevelopers.com/jason.eckert/blog/Entries/2019/6/1_Entry_1.html) Today, Linux and open source rules the world, and the UNIX philosophy is widely considered compulsory. Organizations are striving to build small, focused applications that work collaboratively in a cloud and microservices environment. We rely on the network, as well as HTTP (text) APIs for storing and referencing data. Moreover, nearly all configuration is stored and communicated using text (e.g. YAML, JSON or XML). And while the UNIX philosophy has changed dramatically over the past 5 decades, it hasn’t strayed too far from Ken Thompson’s original definition in 1973: We write programs that do one thing and do it well We write programs to work together And we write programs that handle text streams, because that is a universal interface Why Use Package Managers? (https://uwm.edu/hpc/software-management/) Valuable research is often hindered or outright prevented by the inability to install software. This need not be the case. Since I began supporting research computing in 1999, I’ve frequently seen researchers struggle for days or weeks trying to install a single open source application. In most cases, they ultimately failed. In many cases, they could have easily installed the software in seconds with one simple command, using a package manager such as Debian packages, FreeBSD ports, MacPorts, or Pkgsrc, just to name a few. Developer websites often contain poorly written instructions for doing “caveman installs”; manually downloading, unpacking, patching, and building the software. The same laborious process must often be followed for other software packages on which it depends, which can sometimes number in the dozens. Many researchers are simply unaware that there are easier ways to install the software they need. Caveman installs are a colossal waste of man-hours. If 1000 people around the globe spend an average of 20 hours each trying to install the same program that could have been installed with a package manager (this is not uncommon), then 20,000 man-hours have been lost that could have gone toward science. How many important discoveries are delayed by this? The elite research institutions have ample funding and dozens of IT staff dedicated to research computing. They can churn out publications even if their operation is inefficient. Most institutions, however, have few or no IT staff dedicated to research, and cannot afford to squander precious man-hours on temporary, one-off software installs. The wise approach for those of us in that situation is to collaborate on making software deployment easier for everyone. If we do so, then even the smallest research groups can leverage that work to be more productive and make more frequent contributions to science. Fortunately, the vast majority of open source software installs can be made trivial for anyone to do for themselves. Modern package managers perform all the same steps as a caveman install, but automatically. Package managers also install dependencies for us automatically. News Roundup Touchpad, Interrupted (https://jcs.org/2019/07/28/ihidev) For two years I've been driving myself crazy trying to figure out the source of a driver problem on OpenBSD: interrupts never arrived for certain touchpad devices. A couple weeks ago, I put out a public plea asking for help in case any non-OpenBSD developers recognized the problem, but while debugging an unrelated issue over the weekend, I finally solved it. It's been a long journey and it's a technical tale, but here it is. Porting wine to amd64 on NetBSD, second evaluation report (https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/porting_wine_to_amd64_on2) Summary Presently, Wine on amd64 is in test phase. It seems to work fine with caveats like LDLIBRARYPATH which has to be set as 32-bit Xorg libs don't have ${PREFIX}/emul/netbsd32/lib in its rpath section. The latter is due to us extracting 32-bit libs from tarballs in lieu of building 32-bit Xorg on amd64. As previously stated, pkgsrc doesn't search for pkgconfig files in ${PREFIX}/emul/netbsd32/lib which might have inadvertent effects that I am unaware of as of now. I shall be working on these issues during the final coding period. I would like to thank @leot, @maya and @christos for saving me from shooting myself in the foot many a time. I, admittedly, have had times when multiple approaches, which all seemed right at that time, perplexed me. I believe those are times when having a mentor counts, and I have been lucky enough to have really good ones. Once again, thanks to Google for this wonderful opportunity. Enhancing Syzkaller Support for NetBSD, Part 2 (https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/enchancing_syzkaller_support_for_netbsd) As a part of Google Summer of Code’19, I am working on improving the support for Syzkaller kernel fuzzer. Syzkaller is an unsupervised coverage-guided kernel fuzzer, that supports a variety of operating systems including NetBSD. This report details the work done during the second coding period. You can also take a look at the first report to learn more about the initial support that we added. : https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/enhancingsyzkallersupportfornetbsd July Update: All about the Pinebook Pro (https://www.pine64.org/2019/07/05/july-update-all-about-the-pinebook-pro/) "So I said I won’t be talking about the BSDs, but I feel like I should at the very least give you a general overview of the RK3399 *BSD functionality. I’ll make it quick. I’ve spoken to *BSD devs whom worked on the RockPro64 and from what I’ve gathered (despite the different *BSDs having varying degree of support for the RK3399 SOC) many of the core features are already supported, which bodes well for *BSD on the Pro. That said, some of the things you’d require on a functional laptop – such as the LCD (using eDP) for instance – will not work on the Pinebook Pro using *BSD as of today. So clearly a degree of work is yet needed for a BSD to run on the device. However, keep in mind that *BSD developers will be receiving their units soon and by the time you receive yours some basic functionality may be available." Killing a process and all of its descendants (http://morningcoffee.io/killing-a-process-and-all-of-its-descendants.html) Killing processes in a Unix-like system can be trickier than expected. Last week I was debugging an odd issue related to job stopping on Semaphore. More specifically, an issue related to the killing of a running process in a job. Here are the highlights of what I learned: Unix-like operating systems have sophisticated process relationships. Parent-child, process groups, sessions, and session leaders. However, the details are not uniform across operating systems like Linux and macOS. POSIX compliant operating systems support sending signals to process groups with a negative PID number. Sending signals to all processes in a session is not trivial with syscalls. Child processes started with exec inherit their parent signal configuration. If the parent process is ignoring the SIGHUP signal, for example, this configuration is propagated to the children. The answer to the “What happens with orphaned process groups” question is not trivial. Fast Software, the Best Software (https://craigmod.com/essays/fast_software/) I love fast software. That is, software speedy both in function and interface. Software with minimal to no lag between wanting to activate or manipulate something and the thing happening. Lightness. Software that’s speedy usually means it’s focused. Like a good tool, it often means that it’s simple, but that’s not necessarily true. Speed in software is probably the most valuable, least valued asset. To me, speedy software is the difference between an application smoothly integrating into your life, and one called upon with great reluctance. Fastness in software is like great margins in a book — makes you smile without necessarily knowing why. But why is slow bad? Fast software is not always good software, but slow software is rarely able to rise to greatness. Fast software gives the user a chance to “meld” with its toolset. That is, not break flow. When the nerds upon Nerd Hill fight to the death over Vi and Emacs, it’s partly because they have such a strong affinity for the flow of the application and its meldiness. They have invested. The Tool Is Good, so they feel. Not breaking flow is an axiom of great tools. A typewriter is an excellent tool because, even though it’s slow in a relative sense, every aspect of the machine itself operates as quickly as the user can move. It is focused. There are no delays when making a new line or slamming a key into the paper. Yes, you have to put a new sheet of paper into the machine at the end of a page, but that action becomes part of the flow of using the machine, and the accumulation of paper a visual indication of work completed. It is not wasted work. There are no fundamental mechanical delays in using the machine. The best software inches ever closer to the physical directness of something like a typewriter. (The machine may break down, of course, ribbons need to be changed — but this is maintenance and separate from the use of the tool. I’d be delighted to “maintain” Photoshop if it would lighten it up.) Beastie Bits Register for vBSDCon 2019, Sept 5-7 in Reston VA (https://vbsdcon.com/registration) Register for EuroBSDCon 2019, Sept 19-22 in Lillehammer, Norway (https://2019.eurobsdcon.org/registration/) Feedback/Questions Paulo - FreeNAS Question (http://dpaste.com/2GDG7WR#wrap) Marc - Changing VT without function keys? (http://dpaste.com/1AKC7A1#wrap) Caleb - Patch, update, and upgrade management (http://dpaste.com/2D6J482#wrap) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) Your browser does not support the HTML5 video tag.
iTunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – Only via Patreon http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Form Email – http://podnutz.com/minipcshowcontactform/ Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Notes: 14″ PINEBOOK Pro LINUX LAPTOP – PINE Store CPU: 64-Bit Dual-Core ARM 1.8GHz […]
In this episode Leo migrates his NAS to a much smaller case, Bo has been certifying, Moss is playing with a new laptop, Josh has also been playing around with a new laptop, and Joe guest hosts on Electric City Nerds! Then, our news the Linux Mint 19.2 BETA is out, Epic Games gives an Epic grant, Ubuntu 18.10 is end of life and the Pinebook Pro is available for preorder. In our, still kinda new, security section, we talk EvilGnome. Download
On this episode of This Week in Linux, the Pinebook Pro is now available for Pre-Orders and a Critical Security Bug reported for VLC but that was quickly debunked so we’ll talk about the details for that. In App News, we got a couple new apps to check out. A command-line cheatsheet app called Cheat.sh… Read more
Sponsored by: do.co/dl Hosts of Destination Linux: Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com Want to Support the Show? Support on Patreon or on Ko-Fi Order Destination Linux Apparel Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You […]
iTunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – Only via Patreon http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Form Email – http://podnutz.com/minipcshowcontactform/ Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Notes: Your new Raspberry Pi 4 won’t power on? USB-C cable problem now officially […]
Graham and Joe managed to buy a Raspberry Pi 4 while they were HOT. Literally. Plus all sorts in the news including KDE, the villain that is Mozilla, Debian 10, and the Pinebook Pro. News Test Plasma Easily, KDE PIM Update, U&P Sprint bears fruit again and again Self congratulating idiots propose Mozilla as... Read More
Pinebook Pro preorders • MintBox 3 • 10 Years of Zorin • The Linux apps we know and love • Eating ice cream in the name of
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we got a LOT of big news from the Linux Kernel, Debian, GRUB, openSUSE’s Open Build Service, Mageia, Whonix, Linux Mint and more. We’ll also check out some hardware news regarding a portable monitor, some new hardware from NVidia and some new hardware from AMD. Speaking of… Read more
Graham and Joe managed to buy a Raspberry Pi 4 while they were HOT. Literally. Plus all sorts in the news including KDE, the villain that is Mozilla, Debian 10, and the Pinebook Pro. News Test Plasma Easily, KDE PIM Update, U&P Sprint bears fruit again and again Self congratulating idiots propose Mozilla as... Read More
Facebook’s Crypto • Mint vs Win • 32-bit on 19.10 • Pinebook Pro spec bump • GNOME Shell theme improved • Clear Linux for the all of us • Mint or Zorin? • As seen on radio
VPN discount, PineTab and PineBook Pro to launch this year, more news from Purism, Steam Play even better for the 0.82%, Lutris works with GOG games, new shiny Kodi, Gnome speed boost, Firefox decorated, designer Akira, update your boxen, HP supports LVFS. Ice cream, therefore I am.
Firefox is standing out, Pine64 has a lot more cheap Linux hardware coming, and the good and the bad with the new Kodi Release. Plus HP Joins LVFS, why you shouldn't expect a Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019, and more.
Firefox is standing out, Pine64 has a lot more cheap Linux hardware coming, and the good and the bad with the new Kodi Release. Plus HP Joins LVFS, why you shouldn't expect a Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019, and more.
Firefox is standing out, Pine64 has a lot more cheap Linux hardware coming, and the good and the bad with the new Kodi Release. Plus HP Joins LVFS, why you shouldn't expect a Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019, and more.
iTunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – Only via Patreon http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Form Email – http://podnutz.com/minipcshowcontactform/ Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Links: The New Pinebook Pro Will Challenge Google Chromebooks For $199 The Pinebook is […]
It was such an honor to have Lukasz Erecinski from PINE64 join us for an interview where he revealed the exciting new product line from PINE64, including a "Pro" version of their popular Pinebook SOC laptop, and the world's first open source IP camera. We'll also take the RockPro64 for a spin just to see what kind of performance we can likely expect out of the Pinebook Pro. Read the complete show notes, comment or rate this episode, view pictures and obtain links from this episode at https://category5.tv/shows/technology/episode/593/ Running time: 1 Hour 17 Minutes 30 Seconds