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This week we dig into what it takes to get started and involved in Open Source. You can do it in your community, in your city, or in your area. If nothing like that exists in your area, join us at one of the upcoming community conferences! -- During The Show -- 00:51 Polar Vortex Polar vortex collapse Audio bookshelf python code 03:02 Steve's Immich Journey - Stephen Storage templates (https://immich.app/docs/administration/storage-template/) Asset types and storage locations (https://immich.app/docs/administration/storage-template/) Makes sense from programming perspective Not knowing what to look for 10:38 Cheap Card for AI - Joshua Driver issues Quadro performs a little better Stay away from Tesla cards RAM and CUDA cores Stay away from Intel and AMD 16:10 Seafile help? - Tyler Context path Help available in Geeklab 20:25 Church A/V - Emmanuel RJ6 Quad Shielded Cable RESI (https://resi.io/) OBS and Owncast (https://owncast.online/) NDI Camera Aida Camera (https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1697374-REG/aida_imaging_hd_ndi_cube_full_hd_ndihx.html) Scarlett2i2 Knock Off (https://www.amazon.com/Interface-Recording-Podcasting-Noise-Free-Wrugste/dp/B0DPHSDLG7) 25:38 News Wire Fish Shell 4.0 - fishshell.com (https://fishshell.com/blog/new-in-40/) DBeaver 25.0 - dbeaver.io (https://dbeaver.io/2025/03/02/dbeaver-25-0/) Emacs 30.1 - masteringemacs.org (https://www.masteringemacs.org/article/whats-new-in-emacs-301) KDE Plasma 6.3.2 - kde.org (https://kde.org/announcements/plasma/6/6.3.2/) EA Open-Sourced More - theverge.com (https://www.theverge.com/news/621397/command-conquer-open-source-ea-red-alert-renegade-generals) Nextcloud Hub 10 - nextcloud.com (https://nextcloud.com/blog/nextcloud-hub10/) Nvidia Linux 570 Drivers - nvidia.com (https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/drivers/details/241089/) Open-Source Nuclear-Fusion Plans - wsj.com (https://www.wsj.com/articles/german-startup-publishes-open-source-plans-for-nuclear-fusion-power-plant-7b2b6241) Black Duck OSSRA - securitymagazine.com (https://www.securitymagazine.com/articles/101420-open-source-software-vulnerabilities-found-in-86-of-codebases) Auto-Color Malware - thehackernews.com (https://thehackernews.com/2025/02/new-linux-malware-auto-color-grants.html) OpenSSF Initiative - devops.com (https://devops.com/openssf-defines-baseline-for-securing-open-source-software/) WhisperCat 1.4 - github.com (https://github.com/ddxy/whispercat/releases/tag/v1.4.1) Wan 2.1 - reuters.com (https://www.reuters.com/technology/artificial-intelligence/alibaba-release-open-source-version-video-generating-ai-model-2025-02-25/) 27:52 Getting Involved in Community Steve and resumes Be prepared to talk about what you say you know Better to say "I don't know" than lie or fake it A wall of text does not help Bold important things Demonstrate your skills Blog Code repository Website Be willing to make compromises Don't chase a position Get involved with a local group Non-Profits Church Linux Group Business Group Lead with Generosity Jab Jab Jab Right Hook Be prepared to "un-sexy work" -- 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/430) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
This week Steve returns and we dig into your feedback! Kenny joins the program and shares his horror story in the continuing saga of buying and owning tools that you can rely on, authy is going away for GrapheneOS users, what's the best way to handle 2fa on GrapheneOS? -- During The Show -- 01:00 Steve's Crowdstrike Fall Out Waited 10+ hours at the airport Stream of ppl to wait with Steve's restraunt tangent Too much homogeneous systems Windows 3.1 meme Lost sight of critical paths 08:40 Netbox Feedback - bloominstrong Excited about the product Struggle to get things in Struggle to get things out Always plan how to get things out 11:35 Why I Use Linux - Jeremey Free Secure Flexible 12:20 decloudus.com - Jason 2 versions of the S10 Noah's phone plan GrapheneOS requires a chip in Pixels Noah's Dad on GrapheneOS Authy on GrapheneOS Bitwarden 2FA Dark open island 22:55 Caller Chris from Canada Moving from MBR to UEFI Linux Mint backup tool Cowboy approach Install apps Transfer home directory When to use the latest release Keeping computers synced? Nextcloud (https://nextcloud.com/) Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/) Syncthing (https://syncthing.net/) 34:12 News Wire Deepin 20.9 - Deepin (https://www.deepin.org/en/deepin-20-9-is-officially-released/) Vanilla OS 2 - VanillaOS (https://vanillaos.org/blog/article/2024-07-28/vanilla-os-2-orchid---stable-release) Linux Mint 22 - Linux Mint (https://www.linuxmint.com/edition.php?id=316) Wine 9.14 - WineHQ (https://www.winehq.org/news/2024072801) IDE Qt Creator 14.0 - QT (https://www.qt.io/blog/qt-creator-14-released) Git 2.46 - GitHub (https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/Documentation/RelNotes/2.46.0.txt) SysVInit - GitHub (https://github.com/slicer69/sysvinit/releases/tag/3.10) TinyWatch S3 - CNX Software (https://www.cnx-software.com/2024/07/25/tinywatch-s3-is-an-open-source-customizable-smartwatch-powered-by-esp32-s3-soc/) White House on AI - ABC News (https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/white-house-restrict-open-source-artificial-intelligence-now-112389860) NIST AI Safety Platform - SC Magazine (https://www.scmagazine.com/news/nist-releases-open-source-platform-for-ai-safety-testing) 35:10 "Hobo Freight" Kenny Schmidt 3 tools broke Glad some tools where cheap Repeat tools Impact of breakage on the job Watch the warranties Wouldn't buy a second time More caution at harbor freight Dead blow hammer LubeLogger (https://lubelogger.com/) Keeps the economy going -- 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/401) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
What's the best way to roll central authentication? What's the best Google replacement suite? This week Noah and Steve dig into hosting questions, as always your calls go to the front of the line! -- During The Show -- 01:36 PHP, Kanban etc - Joe Nextcloud Deck Our Note Organizer (https://github.com/JoeMrCoffee/OurNoteOrganizer) 03:40 NIX Feedback - Alexander People time rank/prioritize "What problem does it solve" is a framework Effective evangelizing Making something "sticky" No bad questions 13:22 Caller Tony from Toronto Central Authentication? FreeIPA (https://www.freeipa.org/page/Main_Page) Samaba4 Distros Zentyal (https://zentyal.com/) 20:48 Grimnir from Mumble Volumio (https://volumio.com/) Locking it down SSH Samaba Home Assistant (https://www.home-assistant.io/) Adding music Separate Volumio from the PI 25:00 Nextcloud? - Craig Nextcloud (https://nextcloud.com/) is challenging on iOS Head Scale (https://headscale.net/) SpiderOak Immich (https://immich.app/) SeaFile (https://www.seafile.com/en/home/) Encrypt locally, then upload to "cloud" Fastmail (https://www.fastmail.com/) 36:20 Vivaldi & Hosting questions - Ben Hugo (https://gohugo.io/) Altispeed Hosting Vivaldi 41:25 Database Questions - Anton Argument against DIY OpenEMR (https://www.open-emr.org/) Open Source No lock in Form editor CPT/ICD10 codes WikiJS (https://js.wiki/) Weasis (https://weasis.org/en/getting-started/download-dicom-viewer/) 47:26 News Wire OSI Election Results - opensource.org (https://opensource.org/blog/results-of-2024-elections-of-osi-board-of-directors) Red Hat Nova - lore.kernel.org (https://lore.kernel.org/dri-devel/Zfsj0_tb-0-tNrJy@cassiopeiae/) Linux 6.9 RC - lkml.iu.edu (https://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/2403.3/00300.html) Regata OS 24 - betanews.com (https://betanews.com/2024/03/19/regata-os-24-arctic-fox-linux/) Wine 9.5 - gitlab.winehq.org (https://gitlab.winehq.org/wine/wine/-/releases/wine-9.5) Kafka UI 1.0 - GitHub (https://github.com/kafbat/kafka-ui) Firefox 124 - Mozilla (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/124.0/releasenotes/) Gnome 45.5 - Gnome (https://discourse.gnome.org/t/gnome-45-5-released/20043) Gnome 46 - Gnome (https://release.gnome.org/46/) Emacs 29.3 - Gnu.org (https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2024-03/msg00611.html) Cmake 3.29 - Cmake.org (https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/release/3.29.html) OpenVPN - OpenVPN (https://openvpn.net/community-downloads/) SysVInit 3.09 - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/SysVinit-3.09) Docker 26 - Docker (https://docs.docker.com/engine/release-notes/26.0/) Lemur Pro - System76 (https://blog.system76.com/post/lemur-pro-ultraportable-laptops) Devika - Market Tech Post (https://www.marktechpost.com/2024/03/25/meet-devika-an-open-source-ai-software-engineer-that-aims-to-be-a-competitive-alternative-to-devin-by-cognition-ai/) GitHub (https://github.com/stitionai/devika) Ubuntu LTS 12 Year Support - How To Geek (https://www.howtogeek.com/ubuntu-linux-legacy-support-program/) 49:05 Shufflecake Shufflecake (https://shufflecake.net/) Linux encryption tool Makes hidden volumes Spiritual successor to TrueCrypt and VeriCrypt GPG encryption -- 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/382) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
What make the perfect software for fiction writers? What features are missing from all the usual suspects? In this park cast episode 072 of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick, I wander around in the sunshine and suggest the specifications for what just might be the perfect software application of writers of all kinds. Listen to see if you agree, and by all means, add your wish list and suggestions in the comments! This episode was recorded on February 20th, 2023. Links and Topics Mentioned in This Episode This episode recorded at Central Park in Huntington Beach, California. My day job? I'm a creative services provider helping authors, podcasters and other creators. How can I help you? You can now name your own price (at least a buck; upper limit determined by your generosity and means) on all of my e-books when you purchase them directly from me. Check out what's available. Why'd I move to a "name your own price" model? Listen to Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick 070 for the details, or you can read this Scribtotum article. No more need to visit that big online retailer to "Look Inside the Book" when it comes to my fiction and nonfiction! Visit any of the dedicated pages for my books and click the "Read a Sample" link for a taste... and then pay what you want for the e-book! Since this is a park cast, I used my lavalier mic, which I recommend. Hazy Days and Cloudy Nights: "How It All Got Started" is a free fiction serial provided free and exclusively to the members of my mailing list community. Get a new installment of eighties-flavored fiction delivered to your inbox every week when you subscribe for free! Shadow of the Outsider is my current major work in progress. While we all wait, you can catch up with its predecessors, the novel Light of the Outsider and the novelette "The Perfumed Air at Kwaanantag Bay." And don't forget -- you can name your own price for the e-books! Some of the writing software applications that come close, but aren't quite right, include: Scrivener Plottr yWriter An outliner I use every days for a variety of tasks and highly recommend -- but it's still lacking as a software application for writers -- is Dynalist. Are personal knowledge management software applications as close as we get (for now) to the perfect software applications for writers? Examples include: Obsidian Notion Logseq OneNote Tana Why Josephine? It's my little tribute to the memory of my grandmother on my stepfather's side, Josephine Bridickas. Cheers, Gram Jos! The SFWA author who recommended a little AI "daemon" on your shoulder as you write -- like real time fact checking of your own work -- is R. Jean Mathieu. I mention Seafile, the open source, self-hosted replacement for Dropbox and / or Google Drive. It's pretty neat. Big thanks to my Multiversalists patron community, including Amelia Bowen, Ted Leonhardt, Chuck Anderson, and J. C. Hutchins! The Multiversalists patron member community receives the uncut, unedited version of every episode. Want in on that? Become a patron for at least $5.00 per month (cancel any time) and get a bunch of other perks and special access, too. Every month the member community has at least twenty members, I will donate 10% of net patron revenue to 826 National in support of literacy and creative writing advocacy for children. Let's go! Love Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick and have the desire and means to make a one-time donation in support of the show? Donate via PayPal or leave a tip via Ko-Fi, with my grateful thanks.
It's the storage round-table! Steve Ovens, Peter Dennert, Kenny Schmidt, and Patrick Emerson join Noah to talk storage! There's a wide range of ways to set storage up, a wide range of requirements and ways to implement it. What common things do we all agree on? Where do we disagree and why? -- During The Show -- 01:11 Steve's Curl Update Thank you for your replies Where do you learn about shell commands/variables 04:51 Jeremy reflects on 312 crypto - Jeremy Can't use it at stores Mining creates e-waste and raises price of GPUs Buying a cupcake was eye opening FTX happened because unethical people not crypto Crypto isn't there yet Decentralized currency is self defeating 12:42 Storage Solution for wife - Thomas Manage Storage for her Next Cloud (https://nextcloud.com/) Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/) NFS+SystemD/Samba HDD is single point of failure 14:55 Thoughts on Signal - Nomad RCS works like Signal No interest in stories 17:30 Hank emailed in a lot Thanks for all the feedback 18:35 Question about HDMI - Chris Modicia (https://www.modiciaos.cloud/) Monitors will show up as monitors Plasma Window Rules Enlightenment Desktop (https://www.enlightenment.org/) 23:40 News Wire S2C2F Adopted by Linux Foundation SDX Central (https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/news/linux-foundation-adopts-microsoft-framework-for-supply-chain-security/2022/11/) Intel Arc Graphics Stable Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.2-Stable-Intel-Arc-DG2) IBM Contributes to PyTorch Venture Beat (https://venturebeat.com/ai/ibm-research-helps-extend-pytorch-to-enable-open-source-cloud-native-machine-learning/) RHEL and Alma Linux 9.1 Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/11/newest-versions-of-red-hat-enterprise-linux-emerges/) Tech Business News (https://www.techbusinessnews.com.au/news/red-hat-enterprise-linux-91-now-generally-available/) Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Red-Hat-Enterprise-Linux-9.1) Rocky Linux 8.7 - Rocky Linux (https://docs.rockylinux.org/release_notes/8_7) Fedora 37 Fedora Magazine (https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-fedora-37/) Cinnamon 5.6 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/first-look-at-the-cinnamon-5-6-desktop-environment) Ubuntu LTS Security Updates 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/canonical-releases-new-ubuntu-linux-kernel-security-updates-to-fix-16-vulnerabilities) VMware Workstation 17 Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/vmware-workstation-17-release/) UCB 14 Nifty Needlefish Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/11/automotive-grade-linux-announces-the-release-of-the-ucb-14-platform/) Godot 4.0 Beta 5 Godot Engine (https://godotengine.org/article/dev-snapshot-godot-4-0-beta-5) Firefox 107 Mozilla (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/107.0/releasenotes/) Matrix 1.5 Matrix (https://matrix.org/blog/2022/11/17/matrix-v-1-5-release) KDE Frameworks 5.100 KDE (https://kde.org/announcements/frameworks/5/5.100.0/) Oxeye Discloses Vulnerability in Backstage Dev Ops (https://devops.com/critical-vulnerability-discovered-in-open-source-backstage-platform/) ResignTool Hack Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/11/mac-open-source-programs-may-potentially-contain-malware/) KrakenSDR Taken Down Hack A Day (https://hackaday.com/2022/11/19/open-source-passive-radar-taken-down-for-regulatory-reasons/) 26:05 Storage Round Table Part 1 Round Table Guests Kenny from Altispeed Peter from Altispeed Steve Ovens from Red Hat & ANS Patrick from Springs Church What equipment do you use Kenny's Used Equipment/Value Based Steve's enterprise at home Patrick plays in both camps Peter's custom builds for quietness How do you set things up? Freak Shock through the USB Bus Cold Storage disks 3-2-1 Strategy "Data Pipe Line" Ice Drive (https://icedrive.net/) SpiderOak (https://spideroak.com/) ZFS kernel module issues TrueNAS (https://www.truenas.com/truenas-core/) vs Ubuntu+ZFS vs Open Media Vault (https://www.openmediavault.org/) Alma Linux Tale ZFS kernel module issues What Steve sees in enterprise 47:52 Ohio Linux Fest Steve's Labs/Classes Container Internals Kubernetes/OpenShift Bring a laptop with a VM Ohio Linux 02 + 03 Dec 2022 The Hilton Columbus Downtown hotel, Columbus, Ohio -- 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/313) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
How do you provide open source support to business who use FOSS in production? If you're using FOSS in production you need support. Noah and Steve dig into what it takes and how companies use supported FOSS software. -- During The Show -- 01:30 Remote Desktop Tool - Aaron DW Service (https://www.dwservice.net/) Can't self host Wouldn't use All remote access software is a backdoor RustDesk (https://rustdesk.com/) RPort (https://rport.io/) Simple Help (https://simple-help.com/) Not open source 06:00 Home Router? - Howard Fiber Micro Node Purchase/Build a server with SFP Mind Drip Media Link (https://notes.minddripmedia.com/uploads/aa723aeb-8fba-4d20-89d3-d08db654e0d9.png) 09:00 Migrating OS drive? - Lucas Install and Rsync Data Computers should be cattle Ansible (https://www.ansible.com/) Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/) Clonezilla (https://clonezilla.org/) Block Size Corruption 14:00 Update Machines on Lan - Charlie Don't run a local repo Apt-Cacher NG (https://wiki.debian.org/AptCacherNg) Mount NFS Share (https://it.umn.edu/services-technologies/how-tos/network-file-system-nfs-mount-nfs-share) 19:50 CloudFlare and Ep 297 - Jeremy 21:20 More Cloudflare Feedback - Tiny 24:15 Gadget of the Week Marlin Firmware (https://marlinfw.org/) Prusa3D (https://www.prusa3d.com) Cura (https://ultimaker.com/software/ultimaker-cura) OctoPrint (https://octoprint.org/) FreeCAD (https://www.freecad.org/) Blender (https://www.blender.org/) OctoPrint Home Asstant Integration (https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/octoprint/) Creality Printers rival "commercial" Creality more "tinker" friendly 32:50 Supporting Open Source Different types of clients Flowcharts and escalation Open Source doesn't always have a clear escalation path Projects that offer hosting preferred Bitwarden NextCloud Element/Matrix Red Hat 45 Drives IX Systems Netgate Signing up for these services helps support open source development Open Source Solution Resolved in less than 60 min Patch Applied in less than 24 hours Code pushed to upstream in about a week Rising tides lift all boats Closed Source Solution Contacted provider Still waiting for a response Open Source allows for a better customer experience Corporations use open source to avoid lock in Shift in public perception Ansible is great Containers and Modularity comes at a price -- 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/299) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
In addition to answering your questions, this week Noah and Steve give you some tips and tricks to getting started with a home lab! -- During The Show -- IOT, Wikis etc - Shawn David Hunt (http://www.davidhunt.ie/) HC-SR04 (https://cloudfree.shop/product/ultrasonic-distance-sensor-hc-sr04/) ESP 8266 (https://cloudfree.shop/product/esp8266-wifi-dev-board/) D1 Mini (https://cloudfree.shop/product/wemos-d1-mini-esp8266/) Aqara Leak Sensor (https://cloudfree.shop/product/aqara-water-sensor/) Home Depot Leak Detector (https://www.homedepot.com/p/MOEN-Smart-Leak-Detectors-3-Pack-920-005/313196961) Honeywell Water Sensor (https://www.filtersfast.com/p-Honeywell-WHLDT1000-Water-Leak-Detector.asp) Citadel (https://www.citadel.org/) Zimbra (https://www.zimbra.com/) Nextcloud (https://nextcloud.com/) WikiJS (https://js.wiki/) Confluence (https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/guides/get-started/confluence-overview) Photo Duplicate App - Jeremy PhotoRec (https://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/PhotoRec) Photo Prism (https://photoprism.app/) Tech Mint Dedupe Files in Linux (https://www.tecmint.com/fdupes-find-and-delete-duplicate-files-in-linux/) User Responds to Nextcloud on Ep 266 - Ashley Cert Issue LAN access with Cisco VPN and docker - ? Need more information Call In! QNAP Follow up - Brad Will take a look at ZFS Send Installing TrueNAS on a Qnap Pick of the Week Swaks (https://jetmore.org/john/code/swaks/) Swiss Army Knife for SMTP, ESMTP and LMTP SMTP Extensions Written and maintained by John Jetmore Gadget of the Week Aria-net.org (https://aria-net.org/SitePages/Portal/Bridges.aspx) How federation works Bifrost bridge JMP.chat (https://jmp.chat/) NewsWire Ubuntu 20.04 released (https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-announce/2022-February/000277.html) Alma Linux for PowerPC (https://wiki.almalinux.org/release-notes/8.5-ppc.html) Gnome Release (https://mail.gnome.org/archives/devel-announce-list/2022-February/msg00002.html) Linux Mint Release (https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4281) Torvalds Worried (https://www.techradar.com/news/torvalds-admits-hes-a-bit-worried-about-the-next-linux-build) ReiserFS in the Linux Kernel (https://www.theregister.com/2022/02/24/linux_kernel_takes_a_step/) Github Open Source Security (https://www.protocol.com/newsletters/protocol-enterprise/github-open-source-security-singularity) Test Sigma (https://insidehpc.com/2022/02/testsigma-raises-4-6m-for-open-source-test-automation/) Red Hat Joins Magma Core (https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/red-hat-joins-magma-core-foundation-at-premier-level-community-set-to-further-open-source-mobile-packet-core-301491306.html) Home Lab Set Up What are you trying to achieve? Syncthing (https://syncthing.net/) Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/) Next Cloud (https://nextcloud.com/) Backups SpiderOak (https://spideroak.com/) Ice Drive (https://icedrive.net/) Encryption Threat Modeling Offline Data Noah's Backup Strategy Start with data storage -- 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/275) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
The team from Altispeed Technologies join Noah this episode to tell the story of how Altispeed Technologies was born, where it is today, and where the team is headed! 01:15 Altispeed Today Help Desk - Issac Installation and Support - Kenny & Peter Backend R&D - Richard & Simon Administration - Sarah & Jess 02:28 Epoch 1 02:30 Origins of Altispeed 02:40 Why Open Source 05:50 Professional Development Program 07:50 RHEL 5.0 & Red Hat 11:15 Dec 2009 Altispeed is Born 12:25 Noah does everything 13:50 Altispeed Mission Statement 14:55 Philippians 2-4 15:08 Matthew 20-28 17:00 Epoch 2 17:20 Altispeed's First Hire 18:38 The 3 Hiring Questions Do they get what we are trying to do? Do they want to do what we are trying to do? Do they have the capacity to do it? Value People and Relationships above all else 19:40 Buck Stops with Me 20:00 Employees are a mixed blessing 21:42 Epoch 3 Remote Services & Support Podcast Starts A Complete Disaster Success is standing on a pile of failures 26:18 Epoch 4 Covid 19 Hits 28:50 Going forward decisions 30:15 How to serve better 30:46 Peter & Kenny Join the Disscusion 31:00 Kenny's Take 34:30 RpiSurv (https://github.com/SvenVD/rpisurv) 37:15 FOSS Polish 39:02 ANS Outreach & Service 41:55 Noah can work "on" not "for" Altispeed 43:43 Noah's dedication to ANS & the community 44:50 Ask Noah Show Studio 48:30 Epoch 5 The Future of Altispeed 49:28 People stay when they can directly impact the work they do 50:22 How to serve clients going forward 52:32 More than a show tag line 58:16 Tony from Jitsi Asks How do you control what you support? Virtualize Define things up front Altispeed rejects "monkey hands jobs" One place to call has value Being the "middle man" allows you to introduce FOSS alternatives 1:14:36 Today people ask "what can technology do for me" not "what can I do with technology" 1:16:40 How Altispeed does cloud better 1:19:35 Radio likes to be self sufficient 1:20:22 Build Modular Solutions 1:22:55 Plans for 2022 1:24:05 Software is more than a tool 1:24:44 Learn from others Dave Ramsey - Podcast (https://www.ramseysolutions.com/shows/the-ramsey-show/) Franklin Covey - 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Book (https://www.franklincovey.com/the-7-habits/) Rabbi Daniel Lapin - Thou Shalt Prosper Book (https://rabbidaniellapin.com/product/thou-shall-prosper-hardcover-book/) 1:27:48 Reducing friction and setting boundaries Altispeed Tools 1:29:52 Element/Matrix Channels Reply Chains Reactions Federation Spaces 1:40:02 SeaFile (https://www.seafile.com/) Beautiful UI Able to be White Labeled 1:42:24 Nextcloud (https://nextcloud.com/) Deck Gets better over time 1:44:30 OSTicket (https://osticket.com/) Lacking Solid Mobile App Open API 1:48:08 Simple Help (https://simple-help.com/) Proprietary Intuitive UI Unstable on Macs Self Hosted Extra tools that reduce friction Audience Questions 1:50:52 Kpovoc Asks I'd be curious to know how often your clients have problems that might be easier solved by a custom written software vs finding an applicable existing FOSS solution? Many times combining/modifying open source solutions works best 1:54:30 Tony Asks I'd be interested in knowing if you charge customers extra if they want to make changes to an already working solution. Would that be a charge to not have them abuse your time/technician time? Managed Service Contracts Hourly Service What is your most popular service? Access Controls and Cameras Networking 1:57:42 AtypicalKernel Asks How do you deal with clients who don't communicate their needs clearly? Discovery Process R&D Phase Presentation Execute Circle back to Discovery Project Planning recommendations Follow up How do you deal with a client who blames the solution rather than acknowledging their own mistakes and/or short comings? Teach the user Help them understand the limitations of their technology 2:09:30 Tony Asks Are you able to share how you price a solution/support contract? Price hourly Contract Services are locked down What access control systems do you typically deploy? Axis A1001 Door Controller (https://www.axis.com/products/axis-a1001) Powerful integrations HID Readers (https://www.hidglobal.com/products/readers) Proxy III (https://www.hidglobal.com/products/cards-and-credentials/hid-proximity/1346) Adams Rite door strikes (https://www.adamsrite.com/en/products/electric-strikes/) Completely Modular Understand your threat vector HID SEOS (https://www.hidglobal.com/products/cards-and-credentials/seos) Why Noah like HID products 2:19:50 Kpovoc Asks Do clients pay for the discovery process? No, never Discovery benefits Altispeed not the client 2:21:25 Tony Asks How do you deal with a customer who comes to you asking you if you can provide a solution for something you've never done? Do you tackle it even if it is a one of? We love learning new technology Noah loves getting to see behind the scenes Altispeed specializes in this Tony clarifies his previous question We try to move to a open source solution We still take on proprietary software to reduce friction and server the customer well 2:25:14 jutana Asks You mentioned virtualization desktops , are you then using thin clients to access or low end PCs, also how do you deal with multimonitor support (SPICE?) and or USB peripherals? How are you dealing with standardizations on physical machines, imaging or other? RDP in lightweight Windows 10 Moving away from this Thinlinx (https://thinlinx.com/) Continuing to explore Focus is more on the back end VM 2:29:15 Tony Asks Do you guys host email yourselves? Not currently Mail in a Box (https://mailinabox.email/) 2:30:31 toadrocksboat Asked Do you provide critical 24/7 after hours support? How do you balance that with such a lean team? Absolutely Open Source Tooling helps us do that Mentioned in the show Cable Comb (http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01BTUI1TQ/?tag=minddripmedia-20) Volumio (https://volumio.com/) Rivindale (http://rivendellaudio.org/) Axia LiveWire (https://www.telosalliance.com/livewire-aes67-aoip-networking) Ink Scape (https://inkscape.org/) Kden Live (https://kdenlive.org/) Gourmet (https://github.com/thinkle/gourmet) Virsh (https://www.libvirt.org/manpages/virsh.html) Cockpit (https://cockpit-project.org/) -- 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/267) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
3D-Audio-Inhalte sollen für ein besonders räumliches Klangerlebnis sorgen [--] so, als wäre man live dabei. Neben Apple Music, bieten außerdem Deezer, Amazon und Tidal ausgewählte Titel in 3D-Sound an. Das Problem: Hier kämpfen gerade zwei Formate um die Vorherrschaft: Dolby Atmos und Sony 360 Reality Audio (360RA). Und natürlich kann man die 3D-Songs auch nicht einfach so anhören. Es braucht dazu neben dem richtigen Streaming-Anbieter auch das passende Abspiel-Equipment. Freilich locken bereits Kopfhörer, Soundbars und Netzwerklautsprecher mit der Funktion. Doch lohnt es sich, jetzt schon in die Technik einzusteigen? Wo liegen Vorteile und Chancen und wo kämpft 3D-Audio noch mit Kinderkrankheiten. Das klären alles wir im Uplink 40.5. Mit dabei: Hartmut Gieselmann und Sven Hansen Die c't 23/2021 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Vergesst nicht unseren neuen YouTube-Channel c't 3003! Keno stellt sich hier unter anderem der "Bedienung aus der Hölle" und testet Streamingdienste und Mediatheken im Hinblick auf Alltagstauglichkeit und Benutzerfreundlichkeit. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis === ONLYOFFICE gehört mit über 7 Millionen Benutzern weltweit zu den führenden Open-Source-Plattformen für die kollaborative und sichere Bearbeitung von Dokumenten. Die Software integriert alle bekannten Funktionen gängiger Desktop-Anwendungen und bietet Usern darüber hinaus umfassende Möglichkeiten für Zusammenarbeit in Echtzeit. Die Office-Suite lässt sich in jede Cloud-Plattform wie Nextcloud, ownCloud, Seafile und viele andere integrieren. Weitere Informationen über ONLYOFFICE finden Sie unter www.onlyoffice.com/de. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis Ende ===
3D-Audio-Inhalte sollen für ein besonders räumliches Klangerlebnis sorgen [--] so, als wäre man live dabei. Neben Apple Music, bieten außerdem Deezer, Amazon und Tidal ausgewählte Titel in 3D-Sound an. Das Problem: Hier kämpfen gerade zwei Formate um die Vorherrschaft: Dolby Atmos und Sony 360 Reality Audio (360RA). Und natürlich kann man die 3D-Songs auch nicht einfach so anhören. Es braucht dazu neben dem richtigen Streaming-Anbieter auch das passende Abspiel-Equipment. Freilich locken bereits Kopfhörer, Soundbars und Netzwerklautsprecher mit der Funktion. Doch lohnt es sich, jetzt schon in die Technik einzusteigen? Wo liegen Vorteile und Chancen und wo kämpft 3D-Audio noch mit Kinderkrankheiten. Das klären alles wir im Uplink 40.5. Mit dabei: Hartmut Gieselmann und Sven Hansen Die c't 23/2021 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Vergesst nicht unseren neuen YouTube-Channel c't 3003! Keno stellt sich hier unter anderem der "Bedienung aus der Hölle" und testet Streamingdienste und Mediatheken im Hinblick auf Alltagstauglichkeit und Benutzerfreundlichkeit. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis === ONLYOFFICE gehört mit über 7 Millionen Benutzern weltweit zu den führenden Open-Source-Plattformen für die kollaborative und sichere Bearbeitung von Dokumenten. Die Software integriert alle bekannten Funktionen gängiger Desktop-Anwendungen und bietet Usern darüber hinaus umfassende Möglichkeiten für Zusammenarbeit in Echtzeit. Die Office-Suite lässt sich in jede Cloud-Plattform wie Nextcloud, ownCloud, Seafile und viele andere integrieren. Weitere Informationen über ONLYOFFICE finden Sie unter www.onlyoffice.com/de. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis Ende ===
3D-Audio-Inhalte sollen für ein besonders räumliches Klangerlebnis sorgen [--] so, als wäre man live dabei. Neben Apple Music, bieten außerdem Deezer, Amazon und Tidal ausgewählte Titel in 3D-Sound an. Das Problem: Hier kämpfen gerade zwei Formate um die Vorherrschaft: Dolby Atmos und Sony 360 Reality Audio (360RA). Und natürlich kann man die 3D-Songs auch nicht einfach so anhören. Es braucht dazu neben dem richtigen Streaming-Anbieter auch das passende Abspiel-Equipment. Freilich locken bereits Kopfhörer, Soundbars und Netzwerklautsprecher mit der Funktion. Doch lohnt es sich, jetzt schon in die Technik einzusteigen? Wo liegen Vorteile und Chancen und wo kämpft 3D-Audio noch mit Kinderkrankheiten. Das klären alles wir im Uplink 40.5. Mit dabei: Hartmut Gieselmann und Sven Hansen Die c't 23/2021 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Vergesst nicht unseren neuen YouTube-Channel c't 3003! Keno stellt sich hier unter anderem der "Bedienung aus der Hölle" und testet Streamingdienste und Mediatheken im Hinblick auf Alltagstauglichkeit und Benutzerfreundlichkeit. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis === ONLYOFFICE gehört mit über 7 Millionen Benutzern weltweit zu den führenden Open-Source-Plattformen für die kollaborative und sichere Bearbeitung von Dokumenten. Die Software integriert alle bekannten Funktionen gängiger Desktop-Anwendungen und bietet Usern darüber hinaus umfassende Möglichkeiten für Zusammenarbeit in Echtzeit. Die Office-Suite lässt sich in jede Cloud-Plattform wie Nextcloud, ownCloud, Seafile und viele andere integrieren. Weitere Informationen über ONLYOFFICE finden Sie unter www.onlyoffice.com/de. === Anzeige / Sponsorenhinweis Ende ===
In dieser Folge widmen sich Christian und Rebecca unserem ersten Thema der Kategorie „UniBytes“. Zur Erinnerung: Bei den „Byte“-Themen werden digitale Konzepte vorgestellt, während es bei den „Bit“-Folgen um digitale Elemente im Studium und die digitale Vernetzung geht. Diesmal dreht sich alles um das Konzept Co-Creation. Die Folge ist in zwei Teile unterteilt. Im diesem zweiten Teil der Folge hört ihr ein Interview, das Christian mit Prof. Dr. Andreas Hepp, Mitentwickler der Nachrichtenplattform molo.news, geführt hat. Die Idee hinter molo.news ist, eine App für alle lokalen News in Bremen und Umgebung zu schaffen. Im Interview erklärt Andreas Hepp, wie die Plattform mithilfe von Co-Creation, also unter Einbezug der Nutzer*innen und verbreitenden Kollektiven, entwickelt wurde und welche Chancen und Herausforderungen diese Herangehensweise mit sich bringt. Außerdem stellt euch Louis in der Rubrik „UniTips“ die Plattform Seafile vor, mit der auch ihr eure Co-Creation-Projekte umsetzen könnt. Wir vom UniBits-Podcast nutzen Seafile auf jeden Fall schon sehr fleißig für unsere Zusammenarbeit. Wir sind nun auch auch bei molo.news vertreten. Reinschauen lohnt sich also gleich doppelt! Einfach die App downloaden und nach „UniBits“ suchen! :) Natürlich findet ihr uns aber auch weiterhin auf Instagram oder unserem Blog. Schaut gerne vorbei! Wir freuen uns über euer Feedback und eure Ideen! Links UniBits auf Instagram: www.instagram.com/unibits_podcast/ UniBits Blog: https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/digitales/podcast-unibits/ molo.news: https://molo.news/ Seafile: https://seafile.zfn.uni-bremen.de/ Credits Moderation: Rebecca Grünhagen, Christian Mundt Gast: Prof. Dr. Andreas Hepp UniTips: Louis Kniefs Schnitt: Carolin Müller
In dieser Folge widmen sich Christian und Rebecca unserem ersten Thema der Kategorie „UniBytes“. Zur Erinnerung: Bei den „Byte“-Themen werden digitale Konzepte vorgestellt, während es bei den „Bit“-Folgen um digitale Elemente im Studium und die digitale Vernetzung geht. Diesmal dreht sich alles um das Konzept Co-Creation. Die Folge ist in zwei Teile unterteilt. In diesem ersten Teil der Folge hört ihr ein Interview, das Rebecca gemeinsam mit Franziska Richter, Referentin für digitale Konzepte im Referat Lehre und Studium und Dr. Juliane Jarke geführt hat. Juliane Jarke ist wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin im Fachbereich Informatik und beschäftigt sich mit der zunehmenden Digitalisierung im öffentlichen Sektor bzw. in der Bildung. Sie erklärt, was Co-Creation überhaupt bedeutet und gibt einige Einblicke in ihre Forschung. Im zweiten Teil folgt ein Praxisbeispiel von Co-Creation an der Uni Bremen: Christian hat sich mit Prof. Dr. Andreas Hepp einen Experten ans Mikro geholt, der viel Spannendes über die App molo.news zu berichten hat. Außerdem stellt euch Louis in der Rubrik „UniTips“ die Plattform Seafile vor. Also unbedingt reinhören! Übrigens: Wir sind jetzt mit unserem Podcast auch bei molo.news vertreten! Einfach die App herunterladen und nach „UniBits“ suchen! Außerdem findet ihr uns natürlich auch bei Instagram und auf unserem Blog. Gerne abonnieren und Feedback da lassen! Wir freuen uns, uns mit euch zu vernetzen! Links UniBits auf Instagram: www.instagram.com/unibits_podcast/ UniBits Blog: https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/digitales/podcast-unibits/ molo.news: https://molo.news/ Seafile: https://seafile.zfn.uni-bremen.de/ Credits Moderation: Rebecca Grünhagen, Christian Mundt Gäste: Franziska Richter, Dr. Juliane Jarke Schnitt: Carolin Müller
This episode is all about questions. Networking, home automation, problems booting, we have it all this week as we dig through the email inbox and take your phone calls! -- During The Show -- Garage Door Notifications - Shawn Modern doors have open/closed status Standalone door sensor & tie into access/security system Vista 20P panel (https://www.resideo.com/us/en/pro/products/security/intrusion-panels--systems/hybrid-systems/vista-20p-control-panel-vista-20p/) Chalk board pictures - Reed Q: Photo Camera for chalkboard A: Document camera A: Okio Document Camera (https://www.amazon.com/OKIOCAM-Documents-Recording-Time-Lapse-Definition/dp/B0827LLG8P/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?dchild=1&keywords=document+camera&qid=1618353994&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzMUgxTlU1U1VCMlY2JmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwNDAyMDAyMlpaQzVTTkwwQ0pMSyZlbmNyeXB0ZWRBZElkPUEwMTI2ODY0Mlo0REpSMkRLQTcyWSZ3aWRnZXROYW1lPXNwX2F0ZiZhY3Rpb249Y2xpY2tSZWRpcmVjdCZkb05vdExvZ0NsaWNrPXRydWU=) A: FFMPEG one liner ffmpeg -f video4linux2 -i /dev/v4l/by-id/usb-0c45_USB_camera-video-index0 -vframes 1 test.jpeg Chromebook Feedback - Charliebrownau All Chromebook Users should: Backup ChromeOS install Backup data to usb storage Learn how to open chromebook and change write protect tab Download Mrchromebook firmware (forked from Coreboot/seabios) Download GalliumOS GalliumOS (https://galliumos.org/) EndeavorOS (https://endeavouros.com/) MrChromebox (https://mrchromebox.tech/) Caller Joey Q: How to share photos with out app or password A: Piwigo (https://piwigo.org/) A: Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/en/home/) Q: Industrial Z-Wave Temp Sensor + Home Assistant A: Leviton Switches (https://store.leviton.com/collections/switches) A: Lutron Switches (https://www.lutron.com/en-US/Products/Pages/StandAloneControls/Dimmers-Switches/DimmersSwitches.aspx) A: [Global Industrial Thermostat] A: Digiten Wireless Temperature Controlled Thermostat (https://www.amazon.com/DIGITEN-Wireless-Temperature-Controlled-Thermostat/dp/B07YXQS5T1/ref=asc_df_B07YXQS5T1/?tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=385182519832&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=12147899935769829059&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9020765&hvtargid=pla-846321077979&psc=1&tag=&ref=&adgrpid=80210701084&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvadid=385182519832&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=12147899935769829059&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9020765&hvtargid=pla-846321077979) Docking Stations - Roger System76 Support Link (https://support.system76.com/articles/use-docking-station/) Debugging Desktop Crashes - Lucas Check the logs (journalctl) Press Caps Lock key - See if the light toggles Take out all extra componets, reintroduce one by one Ultimate Boot disc (https://www.ultimatebootcd.com/) Memtest86 (https://www.memtest86.com/) First Gen Ryzen CPU have a known issue, check/RMA https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/deck Small Business - Jeremy Running your own company means lots of bosses instead of one Cold Calling doesn't work Spend time networking Give Free Samples Focus on serving the customer well You can't purchase trust - Keep your word no matter what Book Thu Shalt Prosper (https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/thou-shall-prosper-daniel-lapin/1100298600) IT Management - Shawn Knowlegebase Wiki Github/Gitlab osTicket Knowlegebase Device Tracking/Monitoring SnipeIT (https://snipeitapp.com/) LibreNMS (https://www.librenms.org/) Zabbix (https://www.zabbix.com/) Ticket System osTicket (https://osticket.com/) NextCloud with Decks (https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/deck) Pick of the Week Airline Managment Game (https://v2.airline-club.com) Competely Free Open Source No Ads New world comeing in Version 2 Friendly Game Community Over 7000 players Developer Wanted a more realistic game Version 2 Video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iOpWGJB-GQ&feature=emb_imp_woyt) Brave is Blocking FLoC Android Police Article (https://www.androidpolice.com/2021/04/13/the-folks-behind-brave-browser-slam-google-for-its-new-tracking-policy/) Search Engine Journal Article () FloC is bad for privacy Chrome version 89 on is affected EFF Link (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/03/googles-floc-terrible-idea) AM I Flocked .org (https://amifloced.org/) -- 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/227) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they’re excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
Hallo Leute, ich hatte so einige Probleme mit meiner Seafile und erzähle euch wie mich "Firefox" und Nico dabei retten konnten :) Durch ein anderes Projekt inspiriert, hat Nico sich in sein "Codestübchen" gesetzt und ein Script gebaut, um ein dynamisches Inventory in Ansible zu bauen und berichtet darüber. Nico war richtig fleißig und hat endlich eine Monitoringlösung bei sich daheim aufgesetzt, nämlich CheckMK und berichtet über die ersten Erfahrungen, die er damit gemacht hat. Außerdem sprechen wir noch über den Apt-Cacher-NG. Grüße gehen raus an Teqqy :) Wir würden uns natürlich weiterhin über Feedback per Email und/oder Twitter freuen. Viel Spaß mit der neuen Podcast Folge. Links: Gitub Ansible Dynamic Inventory CheckMK Editionen CheckMK Videoreihe APT-Cacher-NG Twitter: https://twitter.com/selfhosted_adv Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/selfhosted_adventures/ E-Mail: info@selfhosted-adventures.de
In this episode, we bring in a special guest, Noah Chelliah, of the Ask Noah Show. The three of us pick up where last week's episode left off. The three of us take a look at managing Linux desktops at scale. Why choose Linux? How do you migrate? How do you train your staff? All that and more on the Sudo Show! Destination Linux Network (https://destinationlinux.network) Sudo Show Website (https://sudo.show) Sponsor: Digital Ocean (https://do.co/dln) Sudo Show Merch! (https://sudo.show/shirt) Contact Us: * DLN Discourse (https://sudo.show/discuss) * Matrix: +sudoshow:matrix.org What have we been working on? * Pine64 (https://www.pine64.org/) * Kobol.io - Helios64 (https://kobol.io/) Noah Chelliah The Ask Noah Show (http://www.asknoahshow.com/) Altispeed Technologies (https://altispeed.com/) Python in a Day (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1490475575/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_dnKFFbD2H0GMT) Proton Mail (https://protonmail.com/) Call To Action Linux Delta - Distro Review (https://linuxdelta.com/) Linux Delta - Wiki (https://wiki.linuxdelta.com/) Altispeed on GitLab (https://gitlab.com/altispeed) Linux Delta on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/linuxdelta) Special Guest: Noah J. Chelliah.
En el episodio 138 del podcast te hablé sobre la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. La cuestión, que desde aquel episodio hasta el momento actual, he estado probando diferentes alternativas, para compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS. Lo cierto es que Seafile, que es el producto del que hablaba en ese episodio del podcast, funciona razonablemente bien. Sin embargo, como te comentaré a lo largo del podcast, para mis necesidades resulta que tiene demasiadas características que yo no necesito. Ciertamente, lo que busco es un producto que me permita compartir contigo, documentos, básicamente, libros electrónicos. Así, en este episodio te voy a comentar las dos soluciones que estoy probando. Compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS En que ando metido Como todos los jueves te cuento en que ando metido para que sepas que es lo que encontrarás los próximos días en atareao.es. Artículos Respecto al tema de los artículos, la semana pasada, inicié un nuevo tutorial sobre diálogos para scripts en Bash. La cuestión es que no siempre tenemos que recurrir a tirar un script desde la línea de comandos. En ocasiones, nos resulta mas cómodo, ejecutar ese script utilizando ya sea un diálogo desde la propia consola, o bien, desde el interfaz gráfico. Las razones para esto son muchas y variadas. Por un lado, simplemente por nuestra comodidad, para no tener que lidiar con opciones en la línea de comandos. Por otro lado, en el caso de que lo tenga que utilizar otro usuario, y no queramos enfrentarlo al terminal. Esto sería una muy buena solución. En este primer capítulo del tutorial, te presento la herramienta dialog, que desde luego, si eres un veterano de Linux, seguro que la conoces de sobra, pero en otro caso, es un buen momento para conocerlo. Por supuesto, que esto no es mas que el primero de los capítulos del tutorial, y en los siguientes encontrarás otras herramientas para crear diálogos, esta vez con interfaz gráfica, como la entendemos todos. Por otro lado, siguiendo con el tutorial de Ansible, en este nuevo capítulo me centro en los bloques, que te van a permitir aumentar la funcionalidad de tus playbooks. Porque compartir archivos desde tu Rasbperry o VPS Hace unos pocos días Ángel de uGeek, publicó un artículo sobre FileRun como alternativa a NextCloud. Este fue el detonante que hizo replantearme el hecho de si Seafile es la herramienta que estaba buscando. ¿Para que compatir archivos? Como sabes atareao.es se soporta en parte debido a tus donaciones, que tienen una doble misión, Una parte está clara, la que ya he mencionado, la de soportar este proyecto Pero, por otro lado, me sirve para saber que lo que estoy haciendo te gusta, te es de utilidad y te sirve. Porque como suelo pensar, dar un like en Twitter cuesta relativamente poco, dejar un comentario en atareo.es, cuesta un poco mas. Sin embargo, sacar la cartera y hacer una donación, con independencia del importe, eso si que cuesta… cuesta mucho. Esta es la razón, mas que ninguna otra, para pedirte una donación. ... Más información en las notas del podcast sobre compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS
En el episodio 138 del podcast te hablé sobre la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. La cuestión, que desde aquel episodio hasta el momento actual, he estado probando diferentes alternativas, para compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS. Lo cierto es que Seafile, que es el producto del que hablaba en ese episodio del podcast, funciona razonablemente bien. Sin embargo, como te comentaré a lo largo del podcast, para mis necesidades resulta que tiene demasiadas características que yo no necesito. Ciertamente, lo que busco es un producto que me permita compartir contigo, documentos, básicamente, libros electrónicos. Así, en este episodio te voy a comentar las dos soluciones que estoy probando. Compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS En que ando metido Como todos los jueves te cuento en que ando metido para que sepas que es lo que encontrarás los próximos días en atareao.es. Artículos Respecto al tema de los artículos, la semana pasada, inicié un nuevo tutorial sobre diálogos para scripts en Bash. La cuestión es que no siempre tenemos que recurrir a tirar un script desde la línea de comandos. En ocasiones, nos resulta mas cómodo, ejecutar ese script utilizando ya sea un diálogo desde la propia consola, o bien, desde el interfaz gráfico. Las razones para esto son muchas y variadas. Por un lado, simplemente por nuestra comodidad, para no tener que lidiar con opciones en la línea de comandos. Por otro lado, en el caso de que lo tenga que utilizar otro usuario, y no queramos enfrentarlo al terminal. Esto sería una muy buena solución. En este primer capítulo del tutorial, te presento la herramienta dialog, que desde luego, si eres un veterano de Linux, seguro que la conoces de sobra, pero en otro caso, es un buen momento para conocerlo. Por supuesto, que esto no es mas que el primero de los capítulos del tutorial, y en los siguientes encontrarás otras herramientas para crear diálogos, esta vez con interfaz gráfica, como la entendemos todos. Por otro lado, siguiendo con el tutorial de Ansible, en este nuevo capítulo me centro en los bloques, que te van a permitir aumentar la funcionalidad de tus playbooks. Porque compartir archivos desde tu Rasbperry o VPS Hace unos pocos días Ángel de uGeek, publicó un artículo sobre FileRun como alternativa a NextCloud. Este fue el detonante que hizo replantearme el hecho de si Seafile es la herramienta que estaba buscando. ¿Para que compatir archivos? Como sabes atareao.es se soporta en parte debido a tus donaciones, que tienen una doble misión, Una parte está clara, la que ya he mencionado, la de soportar este proyecto Pero, por otro lado, me sirve para saber que lo que estoy haciendo te gusta, te es de utilidad y te sirve. Porque como suelo pensar, dar un like en Twitter cuesta relativamente poco, dejar un comentario en atareo.es, cuesta un poco mas. Sin embargo, sacar la cartera y hacer una donación, con independencia del importe, eso si que cuesta… cuesta mucho. Esta es la razón, mas que ninguna otra, para pedirte una donación. ... Más información en las notas del podcast sobre compartir archivos desde tu Raspberry o VPS
Como ya he comentado en mas de una ocasión, creo que Docker, o más bien, la tecnología de contenedores, es una herramienta que tienes que aprovechar. En este sentido durante los últimos meses del año pasado, publiqué un completo tutorial sobre docker. Todo con el objetivo de que puedas aprovechar esta potente tecnología, y que puedas sacar el máximo partido posible. De hecho, en el podcast 138, te hablo sobre la alternativa a Dropbox para la Raspberry. En el te cuento sobre Seafile y que durante mucho tiempo he estado intentado instalarlo en la Raspberry, sin ningún éxito, hasta que al final, lo he hecho con Docker, y todo ha sido realmente sencillo. Bueno, realmente sencillo, una vez que he creado la imagen. Sin embargo, tienes que reconocer, que trabajar con Docker es tedioso, y realmente no te aporta gran cosa. Así, sería interesante tener un interfaz que te ayudara con la gestión de Docker. Y precisamente, atendiendo a esto, hace unos días publiqué un artículo sobre lazydocker o docker para perezosos, que te traía esa interfaz para el terminal. Pero que te parecería gestionar docker desde el navegador. Si como lo has oído, gestionar docker desde tu navegador preferido, Firefox, Chromium, Chrome, o el que sea que tu utilices. Pues precisamente de esto te voy a hablar en el podcast de hoy. Te voy a hablar sobre una herramienta que te permite gestionar docker desde tu navegador de internet preferido. Docker desde el navegador Portainer Para gestionar docker desde el navegador, tienes una excelente herramienta llamada Portainer. Se trata de un interfaz gráfico en forma de web que te permite gestionar todo lo relativo a docker, desde contenedores a imágenes, pasando por redes y volúmenes. Instalación Por supuesto, y como no podía ser de otra forma, para instalar Portainer en tu Raspberry, en un servidor o donde quieras instalarlo, lo vas a hacer con un contenedor. Así, para instalar Portainer necesitas crear un volumen y levantar el contenedor. A menos que ya tengas Portainer instalado en otro servidor, y lo quieras enlazar con este, en cuyo caso, tienes que levantar un cliente de Portainer. Resumiendo, para instalar Portainer, ejecuta estas dos instrucciones en un terminal, docker volume create portainer_data docker run -d -p 9000:9000 -p 8000:8000 --name portainer --restart always -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v portainer_data:/data portainer/portainer Sobre el protocolo http Por defecto las comunicaciones con Portainer no son cifradas, sin embargo es posible configurarlo para que lo sean. Sin embargo, no me voy a meter en este asunto, porque no voy a permitir que Portainer, esté accesible desde el exterior. Así, si necesito conectarme a Portainer para realizar cualquier tipo de operación, lo haré a través de la VPN. Recordarte que tal y como te comenté en el podcast 134, le he dado el pasaporte a OpenVPN para darle la bienvenida a WireGuard. Opción, que con la experiencia de estos dos últimos meses te recomiendo totalmente. Mas información sobre Docker en el navegador en las notas del podcast
Como ya he comentado en mas de una ocasión, creo que Docker, o más bien, la tecnología de contenedores, es una herramienta que tienes que aprovechar. En este sentido durante los últimos meses del año pasado, publiqué un completo tutorial sobre docker. Todo con el objetivo de que puedas aprovechar esta potente tecnología, y que puedas sacar el máximo partido posible. De hecho, en el podcast 138, te hablo sobre la alternativa a Dropbox para la Raspberry. En el te cuento sobre Seafile y que durante mucho tiempo he estado intentado instalarlo en la Raspberry, sin ningún éxito, hasta que al final, lo he hecho con Docker, y todo ha sido realmente sencillo. Bueno, realmente sencillo, una vez que he creado la imagen. Sin embargo, tienes que reconocer, que trabajar con Docker es tedioso, y realmente no te aporta gran cosa. Así, sería interesante tener un interfaz que te ayudara con la gestión de Docker. Y precisamente, atendiendo a esto, hace unos días publiqué un artículo sobre lazydocker o docker para perezosos, que te traía esa interfaz para el terminal. Pero que te parecería gestionar docker desde el navegador. Si como lo has oído, gestionar docker desde tu navegador preferido, Firefox, Chromium, Chrome, o el que sea que tu utilices. Pues precisamente de esto te voy a hablar en el podcast de hoy. Te voy a hablar sobre una herramienta que te permite gestionar docker desde tu navegador de internet preferido. Docker desde el navegador Portainer Para gestionar docker desde el navegador, tienes una excelente herramienta llamada Portainer. Se trata de un interfaz gráfico en forma de web que te permite gestionar todo lo relativo a docker, desde contenedores a imágenes, pasando por redes y volúmenes. Instalación Por supuesto, y como no podía ser de otra forma, para instalar Portainer en tu Raspberry, en un servidor o donde quieras instalarlo, lo vas a hacer con un contenedor. Así, para instalar Portainer necesitas crear un volumen y levantar el contenedor. A menos que ya tengas Portainer instalado en otro servidor, y lo quieras enlazar con este, en cuyo caso, tienes que levantar un cliente de Portainer. Resumiendo, para instalar Portainer, ejecuta estas dos instrucciones en un terminal, docker volume create portainer_data docker run -d -p 9000:9000 -p 8000:8000 --name portainer --restart always -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v portainer_data:/data portainer/portainer Sobre el protocolo http Por defecto las comunicaciones con Portainer no son cifradas, sin embargo es posible configurarlo para que lo sean. Sin embargo, no me voy a meter en este asunto, porque no voy a permitir que Portainer, esté accesible desde el exterior. Así, si necesito conectarme a Portainer para realizar cualquier tipo de operación, lo haré a través de la VPN. Recordarte que tal y como te comenté en el podcast 134, le he dado el pasaporte a OpenVPN para darle la bienvenida a WireGuard. Opción, que con la experiencia de estos dos últimos meses te recomiendo totalmente. Mas información sobre Docker en el navegador en las notas del podcast
Hace tiempo que tengo una espina clavada en la corazón, y es Seafile. Hasta la fecha, lo he intentado instalar en la Raspberry en innumerables ocasiones y no lo he conseguido. Sin embargo, una de las razones para hacer un tutorial sobre docker, es precisamente, la de poder resolver problemas como este. En internet, siempre hay alguien que ya ha hecho la pregunta que tu quieres preguntar, o la imagen docker que tu necesitas, para el servicio que quieres montar, y esto ha sido lo que ha sucedido. Así, al fin, tengo Seafile, la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. La alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry ¿Que es Seafile? Seafile es un servicio que puedes hospedar en tu Raspberry, o en cualquier otro servidor, que te permite tener tus archivos en la nube. Si efectivamente, es la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. Esto como te puedes imaginar tiene sus ventajas e inconvenientes, como cualquier otro servicio que decidas mantener tu. Y es que si te decides a mantener el servicio, necesitarás estar al tanto, para que siempre esté en producción, y en caso de que caiga, tendrás que reponer el servicio. En este sentido, siempre puedes utilizar algún servicio como el que comenté en el podcast 99 sobre las autoremedicaciones para la Raspberry. Un servicio que te va a permitir no solo estar al corriente de lo que pasa en la Raspberry, sino que en caso de que se produzca un incidente, sea capaz de resolverlo. En este sentido, te recomiendo que escuches ese podcast para que te hagas una idea de lo que te estoy comentando. Características de Seafile ¿Que características tiene esta alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry? Además de ser un servidor de archivos que siempre vas a tener disponible, Seafile, tiene una serie de características que lo convierte en un servicio realmente interesante. Algunas de estas características son las siguientes, Se trata de un servicio que tiene clientes para todas las plataformas. Así encontrarás clientes para Windows, MacOs, Linux, Android, etc. De esta manera, tienes todos tus archivos en la nube, y en cualquiera de esos dispositivos. Organiza tus archivos en bibliotecas Cada bilioteca la puedes sincronizar con tus diferentes dispositivos. Pero no solo esto, sino que además puedes cifrarlo mediante una contraseña. De esta manera, solo quien tenga esa contraseña podrá ver el contenido de tu biblioteca. La sincronización es selectiva. Puedes elegir exactamente que archivos y bibliotecas quieres sincronizar. Es un servicio extremadamente rápido a a hora de sincronizar archivos. Lo cual es una verdadera ventaja, y evita que te desesperes. AL final, Seafile, esta alternativa a Dropbox, es como si tuvieras una extensión de tu disco duro con la misma capacidad que te ofrece el servidor de Seafile. Puedes definir la capacidad que otorgas a cada uno de los usuarios de Seafile. Mucha mas información en las notas del podcast sobre la alternativa a Drobpbox para tu Raspberry Pi
Hace tiempo que tengo una espina clavada en la corazón, y es Seafile. Hasta la fecha, lo he intentado instalar en la Raspberry en innumerables ocasiones y no lo he conseguido. Sin embargo, una de las razones para hacer un tutorial sobre docker, es precisamente, la de poder resolver problemas como este. En internet, siempre hay alguien que ya ha hecho la pregunta que tu quieres preguntar, o la imagen docker que tu necesitas, para el servicio que quieres montar, y esto ha sido lo que ha sucedido. Así, al fin, tengo Seafile, la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. La alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry ¿Que es Seafile? Seafile es un servicio que puedes hospedar en tu Raspberry, o en cualquier otro servidor, que te permite tener tus archivos en la nube. Si efectivamente, es la alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry. Esto como te puedes imaginar tiene sus ventajas e inconvenientes, como cualquier otro servicio que decidas mantener tu. Y es que si te decides a mantener el servicio, necesitarás estar al tanto, para que siempre esté en producción, y en caso de que caiga, tendrás que reponer el servicio. En este sentido, siempre puedes utilizar algún servicio como el que comenté en el podcast 99 sobre las autoremedicaciones para la Raspberry. Un servicio que te va a permitir no solo estar al corriente de lo que pasa en la Raspberry, sino que en caso de que se produzca un incidente, sea capaz de resolverlo. En este sentido, te recomiendo que escuches ese podcast para que te hagas una idea de lo que te estoy comentando. Características de Seafile ¿Que características tiene esta alternativa a Dropbox para tu Raspberry? Además de ser un servidor de archivos que siempre vas a tener disponible, Seafile, tiene una serie de características que lo convierte en un servicio realmente interesante. Algunas de estas características son las siguientes, Se trata de un servicio que tiene clientes para todas las plataformas. Así encontrarás clientes para Windows, MacOs, Linux, Android, etc. De esta manera, tienes todos tus archivos en la nube, y en cualquiera de esos dispositivos. Organiza tus archivos en bibliotecas Cada bilioteca la puedes sincronizar con tus diferentes dispositivos. Pero no solo esto, sino que además puedes cifrarlo mediante una contraseña. De esta manera, solo quien tenga esa contraseña podrá ver el contenido de tu biblioteca. La sincronización es selectiva. Puedes elegir exactamente que archivos y bibliotecas quieres sincronizar. Es un servicio extremadamente rápido a a hora de sincronizar archivos. Lo cual es una verdadera ventaja, y evita que te desesperes. AL final, Seafile, esta alternativa a Dropbox, es como si tuvieras una extensión de tu disco duro con la misma capacidad que te ofrece el servidor de Seafile. Puedes definir la capacidad que otorgas a cada uno de los usuarios de Seafile. Mucha mas información en las notas del podcast sobre la alternativa a Drobpbox para tu Raspberry Pi
Panel: Mark Erikson Eric Berry Josh Adams Special Guests: Steve Bussey In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Steve Bussey about Elixir Panel. Steve is a software architect at SalesLoft, which is a company that does sales enablement software to help teams grow and become sales organizations. They talk about how his company was introduced to Elixir, why Rubyists are leaving for Elixir, and sharing sessions. They also touch on how developers have reacted to new changes within the company, the biggest hurdles people face when getting into Elixir, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Steve intro Software architect at SalesLoft Started off with Ruby and now work heavily with Elixir What size is the engineer team at SalesLoft? How did Elixir get introduced to your company? Having a single advocate for a language promoting it in the company The idea of being a “champion” Shaping how other learn and consume What do you think the reason is for Ruby developers leaving for Elixir? Promises that Elixir provides Erlang A different paradigm JavaScript and React Sharing sessions Serving your users properly Their Rails application Microservices How have the developers reacted to these changes coming in? Slow process Professional development initiative Everyone that’s put in the time haven’t’ said anything bad about Elixir What was the biggest hurdle for people getting into Elixir? The importance of asking questions The XY problem And much, much more! Links: SalesLoft Ruby Elixir Erlang JavaScript React Rails Mockery stephenbussey.com Steve’s GitHub @YOOOODAAAA Sponsors: Digital Ocean Picks: Mark Seafile Josh alchemist.el Steve Architecture the Lost Years by Robert Martin
Panel: Mark Erikson Eric Berry Josh Adams Special Guests: Steve Bussey In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Steve Bussey about Elixir Panel. Steve is a software architect at SalesLoft, which is a company that does sales enablement software to help teams grow and become sales organizations. They talk about how his company was introduced to Elixir, why Rubyists are leaving for Elixir, and sharing sessions. They also touch on how developers have reacted to new changes within the company, the biggest hurdles people face when getting into Elixir, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Steve intro Software architect at SalesLoft Started off with Ruby and now work heavily with Elixir What size is the engineer team at SalesLoft? How did Elixir get introduced to your company? Having a single advocate for a language promoting it in the company The idea of being a “champion” Shaping how other learn and consume What do you think the reason is for Ruby developers leaving for Elixir? Promises that Elixir provides Erlang A different paradigm JavaScript and React Sharing sessions Serving your users properly Their Rails application Microservices How have the developers reacted to these changes coming in? Slow process Professional development initiative Everyone that’s put in the time haven’t’ said anything bad about Elixir What was the biggest hurdle for people getting into Elixir? The importance of asking questions The XY problem And much, much more! Links: SalesLoft Ruby Elixir Erlang JavaScript React Rails Mockery stephenbussey.com Steve’s GitHub @YOOOODAAAA Sponsors: Digital Ocean Picks: Mark Seafile Josh alchemist.el Steve Architecture the Lost Years by Robert Martin
Flotter Dreier ohne Elan bis kurz vor Schluss. Dann kramen wir in unserer digitalen und sozialen Vergangenheit.
AsiaBSDcon review, Meltdown and Spectre Patches in FreeBSD stable, Interview with MidnightBSD founder, 8 months with TrueOS, mysteries of GNU and BSD split This episode was brought to you by Headlines AsiaBSDCon 2018 has concluded (https://2018.asiabsdcon.org/) We have just returned from AsiaBSDCon in Tokyo, Japan last weekend Please excuse our jetlag The conference consisted two days of meeting followed by 2 days of paper presentations We arrived a few days early to see some sights and take a few extra delicious meals in Tokyo The first day of meetings was a FreeBSD developer summit (while Benedict was teaching his two tutorials) where we discussed the FreeBSD release cycle and our thoughts on improving it, the new Casper capsicum helper service, and developments in SDIO which will eventually enable WiFi and SD card readers on more embedded devices The second day of meetings consisted of bhyvecon, a miniconf that covered development in all hypervisors on all BSDs. It also included presentations on the porting of bhyve to IllumOS. Then the conference started There were a number of great presentations, plus an amazing hallway track as usual It was great to see many old friends and to spend time discussing the latest happenings in BSD. A couple of people came by and asked to take a picture with us and we were happy to do that. *** FreeBSD releases Spectre and Meltdown mitigations for 11.1 (https://www.freebsd.org/security/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-18:03.speculative_execution.asc) Speculative execution vulnerability mitigation is a work in progress. This advisory addresses the most significant issues for FreeBSD 11.1 on amd64 CPUs. We expect to update this advisory to include 10.x for amd64 CPUs. Future FreeBSD releases will address this issue on i386 and other CPUs. freebsd-update will include changes on i386 as part of this update due to common code changes shared between amd64 and i386, however it contains no functional changes for i386 (in particular, it does not mitigate the issue on i386). Many modern processors have implementation issues that allow unprivileged attackers to bypass user-kernel or inter-process memory access restrictions by exploiting speculative execution and shared resources (for example, caches). An attacker may be able to read secret data from the kernel or from a process when executing untrusted code (for example, in a web browser). + Meltdown: The mitigation is known as Page Table Isolation (PTI). PTI largely separates kernel and user mode page tables, so that even during speculative execution most of the kernel's data is unmapped and not accessible. A demonstration of the Meltdown vulnerability is available at https://github.com/dag-erling/meltdown. A positive result is definitive (that is, the vulnerability exists with certainty). A negative result indicates either that the CPU is not affected, or that the test is not capable of demonstrating the issue on the CPU (and may need to be modified). A patched kernel will automatically enable PTI on Intel CPUs. The status can be checked via the vm.pmap.pti sysctl PTI introduces a performance regression. The observed performance loss is significant in microbenchmarks of system call overhead, but is much smaller for many real workloads. + Spectre V2: There are two common mitigations for Spectre V2. This patch includes a mitigation using Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation, a feature available via a microcode update from processor manufacturers. The alternate mitigation, Retpoline, is a feature available in newer compilers. The feasibility of applying Retpoline to stable branches and/or releases is under investigation. The patch includes the IBRS mitigation for Spectre V2. To use the mitigation the system must have an updated microcode; with older microcode a patched kernel will function without the mitigation. IBRS can be disabled via the hw.ibrsdisable sysctl (and tunable), and the status can be checked via the hw.ibrsactive sysctl. IBRS may be enabled or disabled at runtime. Additional detail on microcode updates will follow. + Wiki tracking the vulnerabilities and mitigations on different platforms (https://wiki.freebsd.org/SpeculativeExecutionVulnerabilities) Interview with MidnightBSD Founder and Lead Dev Lucas Holt (https://itsfoss.com/midnightbsd-founder-lucas-holt/) Recently, I have taken a little dip into the world of BSD. As part of my attempt to understand the BSD world a little better, I connected with Lucas Holt (MidnightBSD founder and lead developer) to ask him a few questions about his project. Here are his answers. It's FOSS: Please explain MidnightBSD in a nutshell. How is it different than other BSDs? Lucas Holt: MidnightBSD is a desktop focused operating system. When it's considered stable, it will provide a full desktop experience. This differs from other efforts such as TrueOS or GhostBSD in that it's not a distro of FreeBSD, but rather a fork. MidnightBSD has its own package manager, mport as well as unique package cluster software and several features built into user land such as mDNSresponder, libdispatch, and customizations throughout the system. It's FOSS: Who is MidnightBSD aimed at? Lucas Holt: The goal with MidnightBSD has always been to provide a desktop OS that's usable for everyday tasks and that even somewhat non technical people can use. Early versions of Mac OS X were certainly an inspiration. In practice, we're rather far from that goal at this point, but it's been an excellent learning opportunity. It's FOSS: What is your background in computers? Lucas Holt: I started in technical support at a small ISP and moved into web design and system administration. While there, I learned BSDi, Solaris and Linux. I also started tinkering with programming web apps in ASP and a little perl CGI. I then did a mix of programming and system administration jobs through college and graduated with a bachelors in C.S. from Eastern Michigan University. During that time, I learned NetBSD and FreeBSD. I started working on several projects such as porting Apple's HFS+ code to FreeBSD 6 and working on getting the nforce2 chipset SATA controller working with FreeBSD 6, with the latter getting committed. I got a real taste for BSD and after seeing the lack of interest in the community for desktop BSDs, I started MidnightBSD. I began work on it in late 2005. Currently, I'm a Senior Software Engineer focusing on backend rest services by day and a part-time graduate student at the University of Michigan Flint. It's FOSS: I recently installed TrueOS. I was disappointed that a couple of the programs I wanted were not available. The FreeBSD port system looked mildly complicated for beginners. I'm used to using pacman to get the job done quickly. How does MidnightBSD deal with ports? Lucas Holt: MidnightBSD has it's own port system, mports, which shared similarities with FreeBSD ports as well as some ideas from OpenBSD. We decided early on that decent package management was essential for regular users. Power users will still use ports for certain software, but it's just so time consuming to build everything. We started work on our own package manager, mport. Every package is a tar lzma archive with a sqlite3 manifest file as well as a sqlite 3 index that's downloaded from our server. This allows users to query and customize the package system with standard SQL queries. We're also building more user friendly graphical tools. Package availability is another issue that most BSDs have. Software tends to be written for one or two operating systems and many projects are reluctant to support other systems, particularly smaller projects like MidnightBSD. There are certainly gaps. All of the BSD projects need more volunteers to help with porting software and keeping it up to date. It's FOSS: During your June 2015 interview on BSDNow, you mentioned that even though you support both i386 and amd64, that you recommend people choose amd64. Do you have any plans to drop i386 support in the future, like many have done? Lucas Holt: Yes, we do plan to drop i386 support, mostly because of the extra work needed to build and maintain packages. I've held off on this so far because I had a lot of feedback from users in South America that they still needed it. For now, the plan is to keep i386 support through 1.0 release. That's probably a year or two out. It's FOSS: What desktop environments does MidnightBSD support? Lucas Holt: The original plan was to use Etoile as a desktop environment, but that project changed focus. We currently support Xfce, Gnome 3, WindowMaker + GNUstep + Gworkspace as primary choices. We also have several other window managers and desktop environments available such as Enlightenment, rat poison, afterstep, etc. Early versions offered KDE 3.x but we had some issues with KDE 4. We may revisit that with newer versions. It's FOSS: What is MidnightBSD's default filesystem? Do you support DragonflyBSD's HAMMER filesystem? What other filesystems? Lucas Holt: Boot volumes are UFS2. We also support ZFS for additional storage. We have read support for ExFat, NTFS, ext2, CD9660. NFS v3 and v4 are also supported for network file systems. We do not support HAMMER, although it was considered. I would love to see HAMMER2 get added to MidnightBSD eventually. It's FOSS: Is MidnightBSD affected by the recent Spectre and Meltdown issues? Lucas Holt: Yes. Most operating systems were affected by these issues. We were not informed of the issue until the general public became aware. Work is ongoing to come up with appropriate mitigations. Unfortunately, we do not have a patch yet. It's FOSS: The Raspberry Pi and its many clones have made the ARM platform very popular. Are there any plans to make MidnightBSD available on that platform? Lucas Holt: No immediate plans. ARM is an interesting architecture, but by the very nature of SoC designs, takes a lot of work to support a broad number of devices. It might be possible when we stop supporting i386 or if someone volunteers to work on the ARM port. Eventually, I think most hobby systems will need to run ARM chips. Intel's planning on locking down hardware with UEFI 3 and this may make it difficult to run on commodity hardware in the future not only for MidnightBSD but other systems as well. At one point, MidinightBSD ran on sparc64. When workstations were killed off, we dropped support. A desktop OS on a server platform makes little sense. It's FOSS: Does MidnightBSD offer support for Linux applications? Lucas Holt: Yes, we offer Linux emulation. It's emulating a 2.6.16 kernel currently and that needs to be updated so support newer apps. It's possible to run semi-recent versions of Firefox, Thunderbird, Java, and OpenOffice on it though. I've also used it to host game servers in the past and play older games such as Quake 3, enemy territory, etc. It's FOSS: Could you comment on the recent dust-up between the Pale Moon browser developers and the team behind the OpenBSD ports system? [Author's Note: For those who haven't heard about this, let me summarize. Last month, someone from the OpenBSD team added the Pale Moon browser to their ports collection. A Pale Moon developer demanded that they include Pale Moon's libraries instead of using system libraries. As the conversation continued, it got more hostile, especially on the Pale Moon side. The net result is that Pale Moon will not be available on OpenBSD, MidnightBSD, or FreeBSD.] Lucas Holt: I found this discussion frustrating. Many of the BSD projects hear a lot of complaints about browser availability and compatibility. With Firefox moving to Rust, it makes it even more difficult. Then you get into branding issues. Like Firefox, the Pale Moon developers have decided to protect their brand at the cost of users. Unlike the Firefox devs, they've made even stranger requirements for branding. It is not possible to use a system library version of anything with Pale Moon and keep their branding requirements. As such, we cannot offer Pale Moon in MidnightBSD. The reason this is an issue for an open source project is that many third party libraries are used in something as complex as a web browser. For instance, Gecko-based browsers use several multimedia libraries, sqlite3 (for bookmarks), audio and video codecs, etc. Trying to maintain upstream patches for each of these items is difficult. That's why the BSDs have ports collections to begin with. It allows us to track and manage custom patches to make all these libraries work. We go through a lot of effort in keeping these up to date. Sometimes upstream patches don't get included. That means our versions are the only working copies. With pale moon's policy, we'd need to submit separate patches to their customized versions of all these libraries too and any new release of the browser would not be available as changes occur. It might not even be possible to compile pale moon without a patch locally. With regard to Rust, it requires porting the language, as well as an appropriate version of LLVM before you can even start on the browser. It's FOSS: If someone wanted to contribute to your project, both financial and technical, how can they do that? Lucas Holt: Financial assistance for the project can be submitted online. We have a page outlining how to make donations with Patreon, Paypal or via bitcoin. Donations are not tax deductible. You can learn more at http://www.midnightbsd.org/donate/ We also need assistance with translations, porting applications, and working on the actual OS. Interested parties can contact us on the mailing list or through IRC on freenode #midnightbsd We also could use assistance with mirroring ISOs and packages. I would like to thank Lucas for taking the time to reply to my many questions. For more information about MidnightBSD or to download it, please visit their website. The most recent version of MidnightBSD is 0.8.6. News Roundup 8 months with TrueOS (https://inflo.ws/blog/post/2018-03-03-trueos-8th-month-review/) Purpose of this review - what it is and what it is not. I vowed to write down what I felt about TrueOS if I ever got to the six month mark of usage. This is just that. This is neither a tutorial, nor a piece of evangelism dedicated towards it. This is also not a review of specific parts of TrueOS such as Lumina or AppCafe, since I don't use them at all. In the spirit of presenting a screen shot, here is my i3wm displaying 4 windows in one screen - a configuration that I never use. https://inflo.ws/blog/images/trues-screenshot.png The primary tasks I get done with my computer. I need a tiling wm with multi-desktop capability. As regards what I do with a computer, it is fairly straightforward to describe if I just list down my most frequently used applications. xterm (CLI) Emacs (General editing and org mode) Intellij IDEA (Java, Kotlin, SQL) Firefox (Main web browser, with Multi-Account Containers) Thunderbird (Work e-mail) Notmuchmail (Personal e-mail) Chromium/Iridium (Dumb web browser) Telegram Desktop weechat (with wee-slack) cmus (Music player) mpv (Video player) mps-youtube (Youtube client) transmission-gtk Postgresql10 (daemon) Rabbitmq (daemon) Seafile (file sync) Shotwell (manage pictures) GIMP (Edit pictures) Calibre (Manage e-books) VirtualBox All of these are available as binary packages from the repository. Since I use Intellij Ultimate edition, I decided to download the no-jdk linux version from the website rather than install it. This would make sure that it gets updated regularly. Why did I pick TrueOS ? I ran various Linux distributions from 2001 all the way till 2009, till I discovered Arch, and continued with it till 2017. I tried out Void for two months before I switched to TrueOS. Over the last few years, I started feeling like no matter which Linux distribution I touched, they all just stopped making a lot of sense. Generally in the way things were organised, and particularly in terms of software like systemd, which just got pushed down my throat. I couldn't wrap my head around half the things going on in my computer. Mostly I found that Linux distributions stopped becoming a collection of applications that got developed together to something more coupled by software mechanisms like systemd - and that process was more and more opaque. I don't want to talk about the merits and de-merits of systemd, lets just say that I found it of no use and an unnecessary hassle. In February, I found myself in charge of the entire technology stack of a company, and I was free to make choices. A friend who was a long time FreeBSD user convinced me to try it on the servers. My requirement then was to run Postgres, Rabbitmq, Nginx and a couple of JVM processes. The setup was zero hassle and it hasn't changed much in a year. About three months of running FreeBSD-11.x on servers was enough for me to consider it for my laptop. I was very apprehensive of hardware support, but luckily my computer is a Thinkpad, and Thinkpads sort of work out of the box with various BSDs. My general requirements were: Must run Intellij IDEA. Must have proper graphics and sound driver support. Must be able to run VirtualBox. I had to pick from FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD, since these were the major BSDs that I was familiar with. One of my requirements was that I needed to be able to run VMs just in case I needed to test something on Windows/Linux. This ruled out OpenBSD. Then I was left with NetBSD and FreeBSD. NetBSD's driver support for newer Intel chip-sets were questionable, and FreeBSD was the only choice then. When I was digging through FreeBSD forums, I found out that running the 11.x RELEASE on my laptop was out of the question since it didn't have proper drivers for my chip-set either. A few more hours of digging led me to GhostBSD and TrueOS. I picked TrueOS straightaway because - well because TrueOS came from the old PC-BSD and it was built off FreeBSD-12-CURRENT with the latest drivers integrated. I downloaded the UNSTABLE version available in June 2017, backed up ALL my data and home directory, and then installed it. There were no glitches during installation - I simply followed the installation as described in the handbook and everything was fine. My entire switch from Arch/Void to TrueOS took about an hour, discounting the time it took to backup my data to an external hard disk. It was that easy. Everything I wanted to work just worked, everything was available in the repo. Tweaks from cooltrainer.org : I discovered this excellent tutorial that describes setting up a FreeBSD 11 desktop. It documents several useful tweaks, some of which I applied. A few examples - Fonts, VirtualBox, Firewall, UTF-8 sections. TrueOS (and FreeBSD) specific things I liked Open-rc The open-rc init system is familiar and is well documented. TrueOS specific parts are described here. When I installed postgresql10-server, there was no open-rc script for it, but I could cobble one together in two hours with zero prior experience writing init scripts. Later on I figured out that the init script for postgresql9 would work for 10 as well, and used that. Boot Environments This was an alien concept to me, but the first time I did an update without waiting for a CDN sync to finish, my computer booted into the shell and remained there. The friendly people at TrueOS discourse asked me to roll back to an older BE and wait for sync to finish. I dug through the forums and found "ZFS / Snapshots basics & How-To's for those new to TrueOS". This describes ZFS and BEs, and is well worth reading. ZFS My experience with boot environments was enough to convince me about the utility of ZFS. I am still reading about it and trying things out, and whatever I read just convinces me more about why it is good. File-system layout Coming from the Linux world, how the FreeBSD file-system is laid out seemed odd at first. Then I realised that it was the Linux distros that were doing the odd thing. e.g : The whole OS is split into base system and applications. All the non base system configurations and apps go into /usr/local. That made a lot of sense. The entire OS is developed along with its applications as a single coherent entity, and that shows. Documentation The handbooks for both TrueOS and FreeBSD are really really good. For e.g, I kept some files in an LUKS encrypted drive (when I used Arch Linux). To find an equivalent, all I had to do was read the handbook and look at the GELI section. It is actually nice being able to go to a source like Handbook and things from there just work. Arch Linux and Gentoo has excellent documentation as well, if anyone is wondering about Linux distros. Community The TrueOS community on both Telegram as well as on Discourse are very friendly and patient. They help out a lot and do not get upset when I pose really stupid questions. TrueOS core developers hangout in the Telegram chat-room too, and it is nice being able to talk to them directly about things. What did not work in TrueOS ? The following things that worked during my Linux tenure doesn't work in TrueOS. Netflix Google Hangouts Electron based applications (Slack, Skype) These are not major concerns for the kind of work I do, so it doesn't bother me much. I run a WinXP VM to play some old games, and a Bunsenlabs installation for Linux things like Hangouts/Netflix. I don't have a video calling system setup in TrueOS because I use my phone for both voice and video calls exclusively. Why am I staying on TrueOS ? Great community - whether on Discourse or on the telegram channel, the people make you feel welcome. If things go unanswered, someone will promise to work on it/file a bug/suggest work-arounds. Switching to TrueOS was philosophical as well - I thought a lot more about licenses, and I have arrived at the conclusion that I like BSD more than GPL. I believe it is a more practical license. I believe TrueOS is improving continuously, and is a great desktop UNIX if you put some time into it. AsiaBSDCon 2016 videos now available (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLnTFqpZk5ebD-FfVScL-x6ZnZSecMA1jI) The videos from AsiaBSDCon 2016 have been posted to youtube, 30 videos in all We'll cover the videos from 2017 next week The videos from 2018 should be posted in 4-6 weeks I are working on a new version of https://papers.freebsd.org/ that will make it easier to find the papers, slides, and videos of all talks related to FreeBSD *** syspatches will be provided for both supported releases (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20180307234243) Good news for people doing upgrades only once per year: syspatches will be provided for both supported releases. The commit from T.J. Townsend (tj@) speaks for itself: ``` Subject: CVS: cvs.openbsd.org: www From: T.J. Townsend Date: 2018-03-06 22:09:12 CVSROOT: /cvs Module name: www Changes by: tj@cvs.openbsd.org 2018/03/06 15:09:12 Modified files: . : errata61.html stable.html faq : faq10.html Log message: syspatches will now be provided for both supported releases. ``` Thanks to all the developers involved in providing these! Update: An official announcement has been released: ``` I'm happy to announce that we are now able to provide two releases worth of syspatches on the amd64 and i386 platforms. The binary patches for 6.1 will hit the mirrors shortly, so you will be able to catch up with the errata on https://www.openbsd.org/errata61.html using the syspatch utility. People running amd64 will thus get the meltdown workaround. This means in particular that 6.2 will remain supported by syspatch when 6.3 comes out. Thanks to robert and ajacoutot for their amazing work on syspatch and for all their help. Thanks also to tj and the volunteers from #openbsd for their timely tests and of course to Theo for overseeing it all. ``` Exploring permutations and a mystery with BSD and GNU split filenames (https://www.lorainekv.com/permutations_split_and_gsplit/) Recently, I was playing around with the split command-line tool on Mac OS X, and I decided to chop a 4000-line file into 4000 separate single-line files. However, when I attempted to run split -l1, I ran into a funny error: split: too many files Curious to see if any splitting had occurred, I ran ls and sure enough, a huge list of filenames appeared, such as: xaa xab ... xzy xzz Now I could see why you'd run out of unique filenames - there are only 26 letters in the alphabet and these filenames were only three letters long. Also, they all seemed to begin with the letter "x". BSD split's filename defaults I checked the manual for split's defaults and confirmed what I was seeing: each file into which the file is split is named by the prefix followed by a lexically ordered suffix using suffix_length characters in the range 'a-z'. If -a is not specified, two letters are used as the suffix....with the prefix 'x' and with suffixes as above. Got it, so running split with the defaults for prefix name and suffix length will give me filenames that always start with the letter "x" followed by two-letter alphabetical permutations composed of a-z letters, with repeats allowed. I say "repeats allowed" because I noticed filenames such as xaa and xbb in the output. Side node: The reason why I say "permutations" rather than "combinations" is because letter order matters. For example, xab and xba are two distinct and legitimate filenames. Here's a nice explanation about the difference between permutations and combinations. Some permutation math So how many filenames can you get from the BSD split tool using the defaults? There are permutation formulas out there for repeating values and non-repeating values. Based on split's behavior, I wanted to use the repeating values formula: n^r where n equals the number of possible values (26 for a-z) and r equals the number of values (2, since there are only 2 letters after "x" in the filename). 26^2 = 676 So the total number of filename permutations allowed with BSD split's defaults should be 676. To double check, I ran ls | wc -l to get the total number of files in my split_test directory. The output was 677. If you subtract my original input file, input.txt, then you have 676, or the number of permutations split would allow before running out of filenames! Neat. But I still wanted my 4000 files. Moar permutations pls While 26^2 permutations doesn't support 4000 different filenames, I wondered if I could increase r to 3. Then, I'd have 17,576 different filename permutations to play with - more than enough. Earlier, I remembered the manual mentioning suffix length: -a suffixlength Use suffixlength letters to form the suffix of the file name. So I passed 3 in with the -a flag and guess what? I got my 4000 files! split -l1 -a3 input.txt ls | wc -l 4001 But that was a lot of work. It would be great if split would just handle these permutations and suffix lengths by default! In fact, I vaguely remember splitting large files into smaller ones with numerical filenames, which I prefer. I also remember not having to worry about suffixes in the past. But numerical filenames didn't seem to be an option with split installed on Mac OS X - there was no mention of it in the manual. Turns out that I was remembering GNU split from using the Debian OS two years ago, a different flavor of the split tool with different defaults and behaviors. Beastie Bits Michael Lucas is speaking at mug.org 10 April 2018 (https://blather.michaelwlucas.com/archives/3121) PkgsrcCon 2018 July 7+8 Berlin (http://pkgsrc.org/pkgsrcCon/2018/) Tint2 rocks (http://www.vincentdelft.be/post/post_20180310) Open Source Summit Europe 2018 Call for Proposals (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/open-source-summit-europe-2018-call-for-proposals/) Travel Grants for BSDCan 2018 (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/bsdcan-2018-travel-grant-application-now-open/) BSDCan 2018 FreeBSD Developers Summit Call for Proposals (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/bsdcan-2018-freebsd-developers-summit-call-for-proposals/) OpenBSD vmm(4) update, by Mike Larkin (https://www.openbsd.org/papers/asiabsdcon2018-vmm-slides.pdf) Feedback/Questions Morgan ZFS Install Question (http://dpaste.com/3NZN49P#wrap) Andre - Splitting ZFS Array, or not (http://dpaste.com/3V09BZ5#wrap) Jake - Python Projects (http://dpaste.com/2CY5MRE#wrap) Dave - Screen Sharing & Video Conference (http://dpaste.com/257WGCB#wrap) James - ZFS disk id switching (http://dpaste.com/3HAPZ90#wrap)
We take a serious look at SELinux: what it is, how you can manage it, and what Cockpit can do for you. The Raspberry Pi Thin client has been announced plus we take your calls! -- The Cliff Notes -- Enhance Your Security with Linux SE Linux Context Changes (https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Security-Enhanced_Linux/sect-Security-Enhanced_Linux-SELinux_Contexts_Labeling_Files-Persistent_Changes_semanage_fcontext.html) SE Linux on Arch (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/SELinux) Cockpit Server Managment (http://cockpit-project.org/) Raspberry Pi Thin Client (https://www.linux.com/news/event/open-source-summit-na/2017/5/thin-client-market-embraces-raspberry-pi) ThinLinx Manual (https://www.thinlinx.com/tlxos-user-manual.pdf) Ebay Flash Drives (http://www.ebay.com/itm/NetShap-4GB-10-Pack-USB-2-0-Flash-Drive-Thumb-Drive-Jump-Drive-Blue-/252448715330?hash=item3ac71db242:g:hfEAAOSwENxXmIBU) Basic SELinux Commands getenforce sentenforce=0 setenforce=1 ls -Z -- Noobs Corner -- Check out the Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) The first 5 people to ask will receive help setting up Seafile 6 on Centos 7 with a self signed SSL. -- 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 asknoah [at] jupiterbroadcasting.com -- Twitter -- + Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) + Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) + Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) + Jupiter Broadcasting (https://twitter.com/jbsignal)
This week on the Ask Noah Show we show you what it takes to get your data everywhere without using proprietary solutions, cover recent experiences with Seafile & of course take your calls! -- The Cliff Notes -- Having a Backup Plan with SeaFile WannaCrypt Makes an Easy Case for Linux (http://www.techrepublic.com/article/wannacrypt-makes-an-easy-case-for-linux/) Dropbox Told Us our Files were Private (http://gizmodo.com/5801813/dropbox-told-us-our-files-were-encrypted-and-private-turns-out-they-arent) Setup Seafile on Centos 7 (https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-seafile-with-nginx-on-centos-7/) Seafile Client PPA (https://code.launchpad.net/~seafile/+archive/ubuntu/seafile-client) Yamaha USB Mixer (http://amzn.to/2qSMbbG) -- Noobs Corner -- Check out the Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) The first 5 people to ask will receive help setting up Seafile 6 on Centos 7 with a self signed SSL. -- 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 asknoah [at] jupiterbroadcasting.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Jupiter Broadcasting (https://twitter.com/jbsignal)
This week on the Ask Noah Show we show you what it takes to get your data everywhere without using proprietary solutions, cover recent experiences with Seafile & of course take your calls!
This week on the Ask Noah Show we show you what it takes to get your data everywhere without using proprietary solutions, cover recent experiences with Seafile & of course take your calls!
Steve and Andrew catch up on a few things, like RASPBERRY!, .NET, Seafile, and Windows 10 (Andrew had an adventure!)
In dieser Folge beschäftigen wir uns darum wie man mit Hilfe von Vibration Strom erzeugen kann und was es für Anwendungsgebiete dafür geben könnte. Außerdem gibt es einen Blick auf die PayPal Geschichte mit Seafile, PS3 Nutzer kriegen eine Entschädigung, Großbritannien tritt aus der EU aus und vieles mehr. Strom per Vibration generieren Omrons Vibration Power Generator Brother Akkus die sich per schütteln laden lassen Techno Frontier 2016 Video PayPal wollte SeaFile zur illegalen Bespitzelung zwingen PayPal rudert zurück PS3 Nutzer kriegen nun Entschädigung für entfernten Linux Support Großbritannien steigt aus der EU aus Distro der Woche: Fedora 24 ist da Spiel der Woche: PayDay 2 Sailfish der Woche: WiFiKilL3r && Prostogram Wie immer wünsche ich viel Spaß beim reinhören ;)
Site TechCraft: www.techcraft.fr Live Youtube: http://live.techcraft.fr Flux rss: http://techcraft.podcloud.fr/rss E-Mail: podcast@techcraft.fr Twitter : @TechCraftPDC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TechCraftPDC Slack: http://soulcityteam.slack.com Podradio: http://podradio.fr/podcast/110 PodCloud : https://podcloud.fr/podcast/techcraft iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/fr/podcast/gamecraft/id796213889 Chaîne Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/techcraftpdc Chaîne Periscope: http://www.periscope.tv/techcraftpdc News High-tech Quenton: Withings Binzen: Nouveau débat d’adblock anti-adblock Ekitchi: Comme quoi, il fait pas bon de voter, en ce moment... Binzen : Bio-charge Kaldin: Area 120 Les News Gaming Ekitchi : Les jeux Steam, payés en Bitcoin Ekitchi: l’eSport en France, on avance Le dossier de la semaine Quenton: Le dropbox de la mer, Seafile Le coup de gueule de la semaine Kaldin: La police se robotiseCONCLUSION Site TechCraft: www.techcraft.fr E-Mail: podcast@techcraft.fr Slack: soulcityteam.slack.com Twitter : @TechCraftPDC
Gregor PRIDUN, Horst JENS und Horst S. plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/8lOym6 oder http://biertaucher.at
This week we’re joined by Paul’s wife Tina (Twitter, Website) & we talk body functions, children and Weight Watchers. While Tina & Chris discuss medication side effects, Chris admits his sugar substitutes don’t rise to the occasion of baking. Paul asks Chris about his new avatar which was created by Len Peralta. You can get your own from FlipFace.me and check out Len’s podcast, Geek a Week. Oops, the conversation boiled down to arkOS, Raspberry Pi and SeaFile yet again. Troubles with installing beta software leads to lots of learning. Chris has learned much about Linux and sampled a few distros. Yet, he still has much more to learn. OpenBox is the amazing desktop environment/windows management for linux that has won Chris’ heart. Macbook battery cycling is supposedly serious business if you want your battery to last. A lesson learned the hard way. Weight Watchers points will not allow you to purchase a Behringer Ultragain Pro Mic2200. Fortunately, Paul was able to get one as a birthday gift. Chris has found a way for a diabetic, and most likely a healthy mammal to commit suicide. Simply eat this pie from Red Robin. Support Montreal Sauce on Patreon
Diesmal mit verspätetem Druck auf die Aufnahmetaste, weshalb die nochmalige Begrüßung zu Beginn etwas schneller ausfällt und die Gratulation an die Schweiz zum Achtelfinal-Einzug nicht zu hören ist. Themen: Open Public Domain Football Data; Open Public Domain Beer, Brewery'n Brewpubs Data; GoalControl; Nginx als Reverse-Proxy für MP3-Broadcasts; Adobe Creative Cloud Update 2014 (HDPI-Unterstützung und Lightroom mobile); Adobe Ink & Slide; Seafile; Auphonic Goes Freemium; ganz viel Google I/O 2014, Android L, Android Wear, Android Auto, Android TV und Material Design. Am Schluss gab es die Österreichische Bundeshymne. Gäste: Bernhard und Ulrich
It’s time to get back on the Sauce. This week, we’re back to Paul and Chris, Canadiéno-e-Americáno. Chris vents about using PixPlant, an app to make seamless textures and maps. These Futurama references to the reptilian space Pope & zombie Jesus are so quick it will take the links longer to load than to play. play. SeaFile is a self-hosted drobox-like service that Paul is trying out because OwnCloud is a bit slow on the Raspberry Pi. Turn your Raspberry Pi into a router? Why not, Chris is already pushing his routers with the open source dd-wrt installed on them. Paul tells Chris not to worry about his routers because Samba sharing isn’t the greatest anyway. As night falls in the Midwest, Paul’s picture fades to black in Skype which brings back memories of bad school portraits to Chris. Remember those reflection style portraits? Chris wonders why anyone would buy a Macbook Air, but Paul thinks mobility is the reason. Who wants to lug around a 17 inch laptop these days? Here’s a Macworld article featuring one idea. Chris and Paul talk screen size for working and mobile. Kingdom of Loathing, a hilarious parody of RPG games that is multiplayer fun. Constantine is coming to NBC in the Fall. Support Montreal Sauce on Patreon
https://portalzine.de/services/podcast-5aes/folge/024/ ÜBER DIE FOLGE -------------------------------------- Folge 024 - 02.02.2014: SVG Cleaner, Cloud Mover, Seafile & Raspberry PI, Minix Neo X7 und Once upon a candle. LINKS -------------------------------------- * Once upon a candle - Vimeo- https://vimeo.com/channels/staffpicks/85147504 * Minix Neo X/ SmartTV Android Box- http://www.minix-tech.de/minix-neo-x7/ * Seafile - Cloud Storage- http://www.seafile.com * mover - Cloud Copy- https://mover.io/ * SVG Cleaner- http://qt-apps.org/content/show.php/SVG+Cleaner?content=147974 SOCIAL MEDIA -------------------------------------- ♡ Blog: https://portalzine.de/news ♡ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/portalZINE ♡ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pztv/ ♡ Twitter: https://twitter.com/portalzine PORTALZINE® NMN - Development meets Creativity -------------------------------------- Alexander Gräf Stettiner Str. Nord 20 49624 Löningen Deutschland https://portalzine.de #podcast #tech #geek #woche #portalzine #pztv
Neues Jahr, neuer Sender! Hier ist sie, die erste Folge des Hackerfunks, die ueber Radio Radius ausgestrahlt wurde. So wie ihr eure GPG-Schluessel verlaengern solltet, so haben wir nun auch unsere Sendung verlaengert. Thema in der 74. Folge des Hackerfunks ist “My Own IT”, digitale Nachbarschaftshilfe. Bei Axel und Venty zu Gast im Studio war Dirk Deimeke, den man auch vom Deimhart Podcast kennt. Trackliste aMusic & Leviathan – Throw Navis Off The Train BeeZerk – A Shuffled Hyperbase MadMax – WarptYMe Intro Velo – Gaia Machina Naechste Sendung am Samstag, 1. Februar 2014 ab 18:00 Uhr auf Radio Radius MyOwnIT :: My Own IT MyOwnIT Forum :: Diskussionsforum rund um My Own IT MyOwnIT Blog :: Dirks Blogeintraege zu MyOwnIT Fremdhosting :: Dirks Blogeintraege uebers Fremdhosting Baikal Server :: Baikal Server Bittorrent Sync :: Bittorrent Sync Bittorrent Chat :: Bittorrent Chat ohne festen Server Owncloud :: Seinen eigenen Cloudserver machen EncFS & Dropbox :: Verschluesseltes Filesystem mit Dropbox Seafile :: Seafile Cloud Storage SparkleShare :: Self hosted secure file sync Syncany :: Opensource file sync Podunion :: Die Podcaster Union Podfilter :: Podfilter schlaegt einem weitere Podcasts vor Speicherbox :: Schweizer Onlinespeicher Freedombox :: Freedombox Foundation Freedombox :: Freedombox im Debian Wiki Freedombox Hardware :: Freedombox Targeted Hardware Freedombox Blog :: Deutschsprachiges Blog zur Freedombox Radio LoRa vor dem Aus? :: Tages-Anzeiger ueber Grabenkaempfe im Radio LoRa Eklat bei Radio LoRa :: Tages-Anzeiger Bericht zum verschwundenen neuen Studio bei Radio LoRa Radio Radius :: Das neue Zuhause des Hackerfunks seit 2014 File Download (140:59 min / 204 MB)
Neues Jahr, neuer Sender! Hier ist sie, die erste Folge des Hackerfunks, die ueber Radio Radius ausgestrahlt wurde. So wie ihr eure GPG-Schluessel verlaengern solltet, so haben wir nun auch unsere Sendung verlaengert. Thema in der 74. Folge des Hackerfunks ist “My Own IT”, digitale Nachbarschaftshilfe. Bei Axel und Venty zu Gast im Studio war Dirk Deimeke, den man auch vom Deimhart Podcast kennt. Trackliste aMusic & Leviathan – Throw Navis Off The Train BeeZerk – A Shuffled Hyperbase MadMax – WarptYMe Intro Velo – Gaia Machina Naechste Sendung am Samstag, 1. Februar 2014 ab 18:00 Uhr auf Radio Radius MyOwnIT :: My Own IT MyOwnIT Forum :: Diskussionsforum rund um My Own IT MyOwnIT Blog :: Dirks Blogeintraege zu MyOwnIT Fremdhosting :: Dirks Blogeintraege uebers Fremdhosting Baikal Server :: Baikal Server Bittorrent Sync :: Bittorrent Sync Bittorrent Chat :: Bittorrent Chat ohne festen Server Owncloud :: Seinen eigenen Cloudserver machen EncFS & Dropbox :: Verschluesseltes Filesystem mit Dropbox Seafile :: Seafile Cloud Storage SparkleShare :: Self hosted secure file sync Syncany :: Opensource file sync Podunion :: Die Podcaster Union Podfilter :: Podfilter schlaegt einem weitere Podcasts vor Speicherbox :: Schweizer Onlinespeicher Freedombox :: Freedombox Foundation Freedombox :: Freedombox im Debian Wiki Freedombox Hardware :: Freedombox Targeted Hardware Freedombox Blog :: Deutschsprachiges Blog zur Freedombox Radio LoRa vor dem Aus? :: Tages-Anzeiger ueber Grabenkaempfe im Radio LoRa Eklat bei Radio LoRa :: Tages-Anzeiger Bericht zum verschwundenen neuen Studio bei Radio LoRa Radio Radius :: Das neue Zuhause des Hackerfunks seit 2014 File Download (140:59 min / 204 MB)