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Empezaremos el programa con las novedades que ofrece Ryanair para este otoño invierno en el aeropuerto de València con 48 rutas. Entre ellas, se incluye una nueva conexión a Sofía (Bulgaria) que ofrecerá a los viajeros una mayor variedad de opciones y conexiones. La capital de Bulgaria destaca por su historia y sus monumentos más conocidos, como la Iglesia de San Jorge o la Montaña Vitosha y ofrece a los viajeros una mezcla entre cultura y naturaleza, convirtiéndola en un destino cada vez más atractivo.Viajaremos a Italia con Alejandro Noguera, el director del Museo de los Soldaditos de Plomo de Valencia, museo que organiza viajes, como saben. En esta ocasión está preprando una visita a La Puglia, la zona italiana que se encuentra en el "tacón" del país.Pensando en Halloween, en el puente de Todos los Santos tenemos a la gerente de Tolur and Kids, María Salinas que nos propone actividades por toda la Comunitat Valenciana para disfrutar en familia.Y para "Comer Rico" nos acercamos hasta el restaurante Maipi. Un clásico de los clásicos en la ciudad de València con una de las barras más tradicionales. Gabi y Pilar sus dueños durante 40 años han estado ofreciendo el mejor producto, la auténtica gastronomía de mercado, y mucho cariño a sus clientes. Ellos se acaban de jubilar, pero Maipi sigue con Carito Lourenço y Germán Carrizo, reconocidos chefs del galardonado restaurante Fierro, y ahora ya también gerentes de Maipi.
To watch this as a video download it and play it from the Downloads section in the Castbox app on your device.Hiking Mt. Vitosha here in Bulgaria and I came across this really cool rock formation that I thought would be perfect for recording a video about habituating better breathing habits. We all know that our default shallow breathing is not optimal and there are numerous short and long-term health benefits of proper diaphragmatic breathing. The problem is that it's difficult to remember to practice profound breathing throughout your day...Read
Neo4j, a provider of graph database platform for organizations, has announced its raise of $325 million in a Series F round led by Eurazeo, at a valuation of $2 billion. According to the company, this transaction represents the largest investment in any private database firm. KeepTruckin, a unicorn company helping trucking companies in fleet management to increase their productivity, safety, and efficiency, has netted $190M in Series E funding. This round raises its valuation from a previously achieved billion to $2.3B. The proceeds will be used to scale its engineering team.Bulgarian-based Vitosha Venture Partners has launched its €26 million ($30 million) fund to invest in about 100 early to growth-stage companies based in or related to Bulgaria, as reports. The amount would range from low to up to a million.Nylas, a communications API (Application Programming Interface) platform, has raised $120M in a Series C funding round led by Tiger Global Management. The new funds will be used to continue extending the types of APIs it offers, emphasizing AI and associated technologies to bring more automation into workflows rather than merely productivity apps.Beamery, a digital recruitment service, has raised $138 million in a Series C funding round led by Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Board's Teachers' Innovation Platform (TIP). Other participants include strategic investors who are also users of Beamery: M12, Workday Ventures, Accenture Ventures, EQT Ventures, and Index Ventures.Claroty, an industrial cybersecurity startup, has raised $140M in a Series D funding round co-led by Bessemer and 40 North. The company plans to expand into new areas such as transportation and government-owned businesses and hire more people globally. According to its CEO, the company is planning to go public.Video chat startup Twine has announced its raise of $3.3M in venture funding from Moment Ventures. This takes its total seed funding raised to $4.7M. Other investors- Coelius Capital, AltaIR Capital, AltaClub, Mentors Fund, Rosecliff Ventures, and Bloom Venture Partners- had participated in the funding round.Unit raises $52 million in a Series B funding round led by Accel. Unit is a platform developer that lets third-party companies incorporate financial services into their operations. With this round, its total funding raised since its inception goes up to nearly $70 million.Internxt, a decentralized cloud storage service, has raised $1 million in a seed round funding co-led by Angels Capital, a European VC fund, and Miami-based The Venture City. A token sale has previously raised about half a million dollars to help fund early development. The funds will go into the company's next phase of expansion, its month-to-month growth rate is 30%, and it says it's certain it can at least maintain that, which will include hiring a large number of people to speed up product development.Akur8, a SaaS insurtech platform, has raised $30 million in a Series B funding round led by an undisclosed investor. This makes the total amount of money raised to $42 million. Actuaries and pricing teams use Akur8 to make faster insurance pricing decisions.Eqtble, a platform that provides HR teams with detailed analytics, has raised $2.7 million in its seed round funding from Initialized Capital. SB Opportunity Fund, RS Ventures, and other venture capital firms and angel investors, participated in the funding round.Transform, a centralized metrics store helping data analysts deliver accurate, timely, confident, and fast insights has announced its raise of $24.5M, which includes a $20M in Series A and $4.5M in seed funding. Both fundings were led by Index Ventures and Redpoint Ventures, with participation from Fathom Capital and Work-Life Ventures participated in the round.
Max Gurvits is a US/European entrepreneur, Chief Host at Summit Summit & Partner at Vitosha Venture Partners. Active in Europe and the Middle East as startup advisor and investor, Max is particularly focused on Eastern Europe and the Balkans. Also, Max runs TRACTION Camp, a series of three-day workshops with Silicon Valley operators, for top founders in the Balkans and Eastern Europe.We’ve been talking about new normal in events, and on the startup & investments scene, about Ukraine as a powerhouse for tech talents, and also about what’s next?This episode was ZOOMed. Thanks for the sound engineering of the podcast to Masterskaya.Space and especially to Pasha Cecetov.
Video version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6Oy2zM4SvY
Vitosha Mountain, the southern border of Sofia, Bulgaria, is home to about 15 brown bears and one bear museum. According to Dr. Nikola Doykin, fauna expert at the Vitosha Nature Park Directorate, the bear population is stable—if humans stay away and protect their habitat. To Doykin and his team, teaching children about the bears is the best way forward, and the Vitosha Bear Museum does just that. Founded in 2002 by repurposing an abandoned mountain shelter for the Vitosha mountain rangers, the Vitosha Bear Museum provides “useful tips on how to meet a bear.” It’s also sparse: the entire gallery is a single room, and the gallery lighting is powered by a car battery. In this episode recorded at the museum, Dr. Nikola Doykin describes why the location is so useful for eco education, how groups of schoolchildren react to exhibits, and what the museum plans to do when it installs solar panels. Topics and Notes 00:00 Intro 00:15 Vitosha mountain (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitosha) 00:50 The Viosha Bear Museum (http://park-vitosha.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/spisanie-ENG_July-2012.pdf) 01:05 Dr. Nikola Doykin (https://www.nature-experience-bulgaria.com/nature-tour-guides/nikola-doykin-vitosha-nature-park-tour-guide/) 02:10 The Location of the Museum (https://www.google.com/maps/place/Музей+на+мечката/@42.636078,23.2115471,14z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x0:0xa27af03db6067ea9!8m2!3d42.636078!4d23.2251191) 04:00 "Useful Tips On How To Meet A Bear" (https://www.novinite.com/articles/204909/Vitosha+Nature+Park%3A+The+Bear+Museum+and+The+Museum+of+Owls+Open+for+Visitors) 04:35 Bear Markings in the Museum 06:40 Ep. 6 Muzeiko (https://www.museumarchipelago.com/6) 06:50 Ep. 46 Vessela Gercheva Directs Playful Exhibits at Bulgaria’s First Children’s Museum (https://www.museumarchipelago.com/46) 08:30 Outro | Join Club Archipelago
In Episode 003 we are heading to my motherland, Bulgaria. I am having a wonderful talk with a local tour guide, Desi. Although I've never met Desi before and this is just the 2nd time we interact, I am always happy to have a chat with her. Hearing the passion and positivity in her voice can motivate you to explore any place she talks about. In addition to the "useful stuff" we talked about places from "off the beaten track". Mentions in the podcast: Places to eat and drink: Raketa Rakija Bar and Sputnik (for best rakija in town); Cosmos; The Little things; Made in Home; Shtastliveca To visit: St Nedelya square with the 4 religions - Christian Orthodox, Catholic, Synagogue and Mosque; St. George Rotunda (4th century); St. Sofia (6th century); Boyana Church; Main pedestrian street - Vitosha; NDK - national palace of culture 1 day trip from Sofia: Rila Monastery and Boyana Church OR Plovdiv (the oldest continuously inhabited city in Europe) 2 Days Trip: Belogradchik Rocks and Belogradchik Fortress + Magura Cave (prehistoric drawings; nearly 42 000 years old) About Desi: "As an experienced tour guide and travel advisor, I've visited many European countries, but something always pulled me back to my own country, Bulgaria. People often say that, “There are no coincidences.” For years my mum had been asking me to take a few days off and travel with her. Like many people, I had spent so much time looking for something over the fence. I never looked in my own back yard. When I finally took my mother up on her offer, she introduced me to so much Bulgarian history and showed me many places of natural beauty that I had never seen before. It was truly one of the best travel experiences I've ever had, and it lit a spark within me! I became passionate about sharing my beautiful country with others, but from a Bulgarians perspective." Desi's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dnatravellight Desi's email: desi.nackova@gmail.com Let's connect: Website: https://curiouspavel.com/ Youtube: https://youtube.com/c/curiouspavel LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/curiouspavel/ Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/curiouspavel Facebook: http://Facebook.com/curiouspavel TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@curiouspavel Twitter: https://twitter.com/CuriousPavel Podcast RSS: https://anchor.fm/s/130888c/podcast/rss My Podcast Equipment: Microphone: https://amzn.to/2AMrDZG Microphone stand: https://amzn.to/3dPdp8E Microphone foam cover: https://amzn.to/3dEevnU Sound card: https://amzn.to/3eUClvF •••••••••••• Music By ••••••••••••• Rising Spirits Jay Man - OurMusicBox http://www.youtube.com/c/ourmusicbox
Интервю с победителите в мъжкия ултра маратон на Витоша 100 Христо Цветков - 8:34:05 Владимир Ставрев - 8:42:04 Любомир Тодоров - 8:55:51
В днешния епизод отново обсъждаме Витоша 100, изминалите състезания през годината и интересни участници, които са се регистрирали за обиколката. Приятно слушане.
В днешния епизод, с Ивайло Хаджиев правим обзор на пролетния състетзателен сезон в България, завъшващ с Витоша 100. Разказваме за интересните състезания и как бихме могли да ги използваме за големия танц през Юни. Освен това, експериментираме с нов новинарски сегмент и да говорим за всичко, което ни е направило впечатление през последните две седмици. Приятно слушане.
The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life
Murry founded Metrilo in 2014 to help eCommerce store owners grow their businesses. Other than spending lots of time with his customers and his team, he love to do trail running in the beautiful Vitosha mountain.
Ralitsa Angelova managed to finish her first ultra marathon this weekend, the majestic Vitosha 100. Her story walks us through fun and happiness to pain and amazement. We also chat about our recent participation in Transylvania 100k race in Romania.
We meet live with Alexander Spasov to talk all about winning the big dance and setting a new record on the Vitosha 100 course. Together with Ivaylo Hadziev we discuss everything from pre-race preparation, strategy and execution.
I talk with Ivaylo Hadzhiev on all things Vitosha 100. Gotta love this episode! Make sure to listen to you dose of pre-race last minute preparation tips and tricks.
Hanna-Liis | In this podcast we sat down on Vitosha blvd in Sofia and talked about Getting to know the will of God ; Considering your family's concerns & Stepping out in faith ; moving into a new country with no home & no job. Hanna had 7 months of trusting that she had really heard from God but it was not without it's challenges. Culture shock of an Estonian moving to Bulgaria. Meeting Brazilians , preaching in bars and setting boundaries ; Reaching into the world as a Christian ; the challenges, motivations and how her views of Evangelism, Discipleship and Multiplication have shaped her into what she's doing now. “He who began a good work in you, will carry it through…” Philippians 1:6 Instagram | @carryusthroughpod Facebook | @carryusthrough Twitter | @carryusthrough Host: Instagram | @GabrielMenchaca_ GabrielMenchaca.com Gabriel & Vanessa Menchaca are Christ-centered, community driven church planters focused on facilitating healthy families and healthy Churches. Through discipleship, edification, encouragement and real world application of scripture into everyday life. Church : Instagram | @NWLAChurch NWLAChurch.com
Coming up this week, we've got something a little bit different for you. We'll be talking with Andrew Tanenbaum, the creator of MINIX. They've recently imported parts of NetBSD into their OS, and we'll find out how and why that came about. As always, all the latest news and answers to your emails, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines The missing EuroBSDCon videos (http://2014.eurobsdcon.org/) Some of the missing videos from EuroBSDCon 2014 we mentioned before (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_11_19-rump_kernels_revisited) have mysteriously appeared Jordan Hubbard (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_11_27-bridging_the_gap), FreeBSD, looking forward to another 10 years (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/01.Keynote%20-%20FreeBSD:%20looking%20forward%20to%20another%2010%20years%20-%20Jordan%20Hubbard.mp4) Lourival Viera Neto, NPF scripting with Lua (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/06.NFS%20scripting%20with%20Lua%20-%20Lourival%20Viera%20Neto.mp4) Kris Moore, Snapshots, replication and boot environments (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/02.Snapshots,%20replication%20and%20boot%20environments%20-%20Kris%20Moore.mp4) Andy Tanenbaum, A reimplementation of NetBSD based on a microkernel (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/07.A%20reimplementation%20of%20NetBSD%20based%20on%20a%20microkernel%20-%20Andy%20Tanenbaum.mp4) Kirk McKusick (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013-10-02_stacks_of_cache), An introduction to FreeBSD's implementation of ZFS (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/03.An%20introduction%20to%20the%20implementation%20of%20ZFS%20-%20Kirk%20McKusick.mp4) Emannuel Dreyfus, FUSE and beyond, bridging filesystems (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/05.FUSE%20and%20beyond:%20bridging%20filesystems%20-%20Emannuel%20Dreyfus.mp4) John-Mark Gurney (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_10_29-ipsecond_wind), Optimizing GELI performance (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Vitosha/03.Saturday/04.Optimizing%20GELI%20performance%20-%20John-Mark%20Gurney.mp4) Unfortunately, there are still about six talks missing… and no ETA *** FreeBSD on a MacBook Pro (or two) (https://gist.github.com/mpasternacki/974e29d1e3865e940c53) We've got a couple posts about running FreeBSD on a MacBook Pro this week In the first one, the author talks a bit about trying to run Linux on his laptop for quite a while, going back and forth between it and something that Just Works™ Eventually he came full circle, and the focus on using only GUI tools got in the way, instead of making things easier He works on a lot of FreeBSD-related software, so switching to it for a desktop seems to be the obvious next step He's still not quite to that point yet, but documents his experiments with BSD as a desktop The second article (http://blog.foxkit.us/2015/01/freebsd-on-apple-macbook-pro-13-late.html) also documents an ex-Linux user switching over to BSD for their desktop It also covers (http://blog.foxkit.us/2015/01/freebsd-on-apple-macbook-pro-82-now.html) power management, bluetooth and trackpad setup On the topic of Gentoo, "Underneath the beautiful and easy-to-use Portage system lies the same glibc, the same turmoil over a switch to a less-than-ideal init system, and the same kernel-level bugs that bring my productivity down" Check out both articles if you've been considering running FreeBSD on a MacBook *** Remote logging over TLS (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=142136923124184&w=2) In most of the BSDs, syslogd has been able to remotely send logs to another server for a long time That feature can be very useful, especially for forensics purposes - it's much harder for an attacker to hide their activities if the logs aren't on the same server The problem is, of course, that it's sent in cleartext (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syslog#Protocol), unless you tunnel it over SSH or use some kind of third party wrapper With a few recent commits (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=142160989610410&w=2), OpenBSD's syslogd now supports sending logs over TLS natively, including X509 certificate verification By default, syslogd runs as an unprivileged user in a chroot on OpenBSD, so there were some initial concerns about certificate verification - how does that user access the CA chain outside of the chroot? That problem was also conquered (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=142188450524692&w=2), by loading the CA chain directly from memory (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=142191799331938&w=2), so the entire process can be run in the chroot (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=142191819131993&w=2) without issue Some of the privsep verifcation code even made its way into (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=142191878632141&w=2) LibreSSL right afterwards If you haven't set up remote logging before, now might be an interesting time to try it out *** FreeBSD, not a Linux distro (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwbO4eTieQY) George Neville-Neil gave a presentation recently, titled "FreeBSD: not a Linux distro" It's meant to be an introduction to new users that might've heard about FreeBSD, but aren't familiar with any BSD history He goes through some of that history, and talks about what FreeBSD is and why you might want to use it over other options There's even an interesting "thirty years in three minutes" segment It's not just a history lesson though, he talks about some of the current features and even some new things coming in the next version(s) We also learn about filesystems, jails, capsicum, clang, dtrace and the various big companies using FreeBSD in their products This might be a good video to show your friends or potential employer if you're looking to introduce FreeBSD to them *** Long-term support considered harmful (http://www.tedunangst.com/flak/post/long-term-support-considered-harmful) There was recently a pretty horrible bug (https://www.marc.info/?l=bugtraq&m=142237866420639&w=2) in GNU's libc (BSDs aren't affected, don't worry) Aside from the severity of the actual problem, the fix was delayed (https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=364511) for quite a long time, leaving people vulnerable Ted Unangst writes a post about how this idea of long-term support (https://plus.google.com/u/0/+ArtoPekkanen/posts/88jk5ggXYts?cfem=1) could actually be harmful in the long run, and compares it to how OpenBSD does things OpenBSD releases a new version every six months, and only the two most recent releases get support and security fixes He describes this as both a good thing and a bad thing: all the bugs in the ecosystem get flushed out within a year, but it forces people to stay (relatively) up-to-date "Upgrades only get harder and more painful (and more fragile) the longer one goes between them. More changes, more damage. Frequent upgrades amortize the cost and ensure that regressions are caught early." There was also some (https://lobste.rs/s/a4iijx/long_term_support_considered_harmful) discussion (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8954737) about the article you can check out *** Interview - Andrew Tanenbaum - info@minix3.org (mailto:info@minix3.org) / @minix3 (https://twitter.com/minix3) MINIX's integration of NetBSD News Roundup Using AFL on OpenBSD (http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20150121093259) We've talked about American Fuzzy Lop (http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/) a bit on a previous episode, and how some OpenBSD devs are using it (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&w=2&r=1&s=afl&q=b) to catch and fix new bugs Undeadly has a cool guide on how you can get started with fuzzing It's a little on the advanced side, but if you're interested in programming or diagnosing crashes, it'll be a really interesting article to read Lots of recent CVEs in other open source projects are attributed to fuzzing - it's a great way to stress test your software *** Lumina 0.8.1 released (http://blog.pcbsd.org/2015/01/lumina-desktop-0-8-1-released/) A new version of Lumina, the BSD-licensed desktop environment from PCBSD, has been released This update includes some new plugins, lots of bugfixes and even "quality-of-life improvements" There's a new audio player desktop plugin, a button to easily minimize all windows at once and some cool new customization options You can get it in PCBSD's edge repo or install it through regular ports (on FreeBSD, OpenBSD or DragonFly!) If you haven't seen our episode about Lumina, where we interview the developer and show you a tour of its features, gotta go watch it (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_09_10-luminary_environment) *** My first OpenBSD port (http://homing-on-code.blogspot.com/2015/01/my-first-openbsd-port.html) The author of the "Code Rot & Why I Chose OpenBSD" article has a new post up, this time about ports He recently made his first port and got it into the tree, so he talks about the whole process from start to finish After learning some of the basics and becoming comfortable running -current, he noticed there wasn't a port for the "Otter" web browser At that point he did what you're supposed to do in that situation, and started working on it himself OpenBSD has a great porter's handbook (http://www.openbsd.org/faq/ports/) that he referenced throughout the process Long story short, his browser of choice is in the official ports collection and now he's the maintainer (and gets to deal with any bug reports, of course) If some software you use isn't available for whatever BSD you're using, you could be the one to make it happen *** How to slide with DragonFly (http://www.dragonflybsd.org/docs/docs/howtos/howtoslide/) DragonFly BSD has a new HAMMER FS utility called "Slider" It's used to easily browse through file history and undelete files - imagine something like a commandline version of Apple's Time Machine They have a pretty comprehensive guide on how to use it on their wiki page If you're using HAMMER FS, this is a really handy tool to have, check it out *** OpenSMTPD with Dovecot and Salt (https://blog.al-shami.net/2015/01/howto-small-mail-server-with-salt-dovecot-and-opensmtpd/) We recently had a feedback question about which mail servers you can use on BSD - Postfix, Exim and OpenSMTPD being the big three This blog post details how to set up OpenSMTPD, including Dovecot for IMAP and Salt for quick and easy deployment Intrigued by it becoming the default MTA in OpenBSD, the author decided to give it a try after being a long-time Postfix fan "Small, fast, stable, and very easy to customize, no more ugly m4 macros to deal with" Check it out if you've been thinking about configuring your first mail server on any of the BSDs *** Feedback/Questions Christopher writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20q2fSfEO) (handbook section (https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/jails-ezjail.html#jails-ezjail-update-os)) Mark writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2zGvAczeN) Kevin writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s21Dn2Tey8) Stefano writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s215nxxrtF) Matthew writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20cwezc9l) *** Mailing List Gold Not that interested actually (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=142194821910087&w=2) This guy again (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-jail/2015-January/002742.html) Yep, this is the place (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-doc/2015-January/024888.html) ***
This time on the show, we'll be talking with Justin Cormack about NetBSD rump kernels. We'll learn how to run them on other operating systems, what's planned for the future and a lot more. As always, answers to viewer-submitted questions and all the news for the week, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines EuroBSDCon 2014 talks and tutorials (http://2014.eurobsdcon.org/talks-and-schedule/) The 2014 EuroBSDCon videos have been online for over a month, but unannounced - keep in mind these links may be temporary (but we'll mention their new location in a future show and fix the show notes if that's the case) Arun Thomas, BSD ARM Kernel Internals (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/01.BSD-ARM%20Kernel%20Internals%20-%20Arun%20Thomas.mp4) Ted Unangst, Developing Software in a Hostile Environment (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/02.Developing%20Software%20in%20a%20Hostile%20Environment%20-%20Ted%20Unangst.mp4) Martin Pieuchot, Taming OpenBSD Network Stack Dragons (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/03.Taming%20OpenBSD%20Network%20Stack%20Dragons%20-%20Martin%20Pieuchot.mp4) Henning Brauer, OpenBGPD turns 10 years (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/04.OpenBGPD%20turns%2010%20years%20-%20%20Henning%20Brauer.mp4) Claudio Jeker, vscsi and iscsid iSCSI initiator the OpenBSD way (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/05.vscsi(4)%20and%20iscsid%20-%20iSCSI%20initiator%20the%20OpenBSD%20way%20-%20Claudio%20Jeker.mp4) Paul Irofti, Making OpenBSD Useful on the Octeon Network Gear (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/06.Making%20OpenBSD%20Useful%20on%20the%20Octeon%20Network%20Gear%20-%20Paul%20Irofti.mp4) Baptiste Daroussin, Cross Building the FreeBSD ports tree (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/01.Cross%20Building%20the%20FreeBSD%20ports%20tree%20-%20Baptiste%20Daroussin.mp4) Boris Astardzhiev, Smartcom's control plane software, a customized version of FreeBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/02.Smartcom%e2%80%99s%20control%20plane%20software,%20a%20customized%20version%20of%20FreeBSD%20-%20Boris%20Astardzhiev.mp4) Michał Dubiel, OpenStack and OpenContrail for FreeBSD platform (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/03.OpenStack%20and%20OpenContrail%20for%20FreeBSD%20platform%20-%20Micha%c5%82%20Dubiel.mp4) Martin Husemann & Joerg Sonnenberger, Tool-chaining the Hydra, the ongoing quest for modern toolchains in NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/04.(Tool-)chaining%20the%20Hydra%20The%20ongoing%20quest%20for%20modern%20toolchains%20in%20NetBSD%20-%20Martin%20Huseman%20&%20Joerg%20Sonnenberger.mp4) Taylor R Campbell, The entropic principle: /dev/u?random and NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/05.The%20entropic%20principle:%20dev-u%3frandom%20and%20NetBSD%20-%20Taylor%20R%20Campbell.mp4) Dag-Erling Smørgrav, Securing sensitive & restricted data (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/06.Securing%20sensitive%20&%20restricted%20data%20-%20Dag-Erling%20Sm%c3%b8rgrav.mp4) Peter Hansteen, Building The Network You Need (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/01.Building%20The%20Network%20You%20Need%20With%20PF%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) With PF (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/02.Building%20The%20Network%20You%20Need%20With%20PF%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) Stefan Sperling, Subversion for FreeBSD developers (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/03.Subversion%20for%20FreeBSD%20developers%20-%20Stefan%20Sperling.mp4) Peter Hansteen, Transition to (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/01.Transition%20to%20OpenBSD%205.6%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) OpenBSD 5.6 (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/02.Transition%20to%20OpenBSD%205.6%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) Ingo Schwarze, Let's make manuals (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/03.Let%e2%80%99s%20make%20manuals%20more%20useful%20-%20Ingo%20Schwarze.mp4) more useful (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/04.Let%e2%80%99s%20make%20manuals%20more%20useful%20-%20Ingo%20Schwarze.mp4) Francois Tigeot, Improving DragonFly's performance with PostgreSQL (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/01.Improving%20DragonFly%e2%80%99s%20performance%20with%20PostgreSQL%20-%20Francois%20Tigeot.mp4) Justin Cormack, Running Applications on the NetBSD Rump Kernel (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/02.Running%20Applications%20on%20the%20NetBSD%20Rump%20Kernel%20-%20Justin%20Cormack.mp4) Pierre Pronchery, EdgeBSD, a year later (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/04.EdgeBSD,%20a%20year%20later%20-%20%20Pierre%20Pronchery.mp4) Peter Hessler, Using routing domains or tables in a production network (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/05.Using%20routing%20domains%20or%20tables%20in%20a%20production%20network%20-%20%20Peter%20Hessler.mp4) Sean Bruno, QEMU user mode on FreeBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/06.QEMU%20user%20mode%20on%20FreeBSD%20-%20%20Sean%20Bruno.mp4) Kristaps Dzonsons, Bugs Ex Ante (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/01.Bugs%20Ex%20Ante%20-%20Kristaps%20Dzonsons.mp4) Yann Sionneau, Porting NetBSD to the LatticeMico32 open source CPU (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/02.Porting%20NetBSD%20to%20the%20LatticeMico32%20open%20source%20CPU%20-%20Yann%20Sionneau.mp4) Alexander Nasonov, JIT Code Generator for NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/03.JIT%20Code%20Generator%20for%20NetBSD%20-%20Alexander%20Nasonov.mp4) Masao Uebayashi, Porting Valgrind to NetBSD and OpenBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/04.Porting%20Valgrind%20to%20NetBSD%20and%20OpenBSD%20-%20Masao%20Uebayashi.mp4) Marc Espie, parallel make, working with legacy code (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/05.parallel%20make:%20working%20with%20legacy%20code%20-%20Marc%20Espie.mp4) Francois Tigeot, Porting the drm-kms graphic drivers to DragonFly (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/06.Porting%20the%20drm-kms%20graphic%20drivers%20to%20DragonFly%20-%20Francois%20Tigeot.mp4) The following talks (from the Vitosha track room) are all currently missing: Jordan Hubbard, FreeBSD, Looking forward to another 10 years (but we have another recording) Theo de Raadt, Randomness, how arc4random has grown since 1998 (but we have another recording) Kris Moore, Snapshots, Replication, and Boot-Environments Kirk McKusick, An Introduction to the Implementation of ZFS John-Mark Gurney, Optimizing GELI Performance Emmanuel Dreyfus, FUSE and beyond, bridging filesystems Lourival Vieira Neto, NPF scripting with Lua Andy Tanenbaum, A Reimplementation of NetBSD Based on a Microkernel Stefano Garzarella, Software segmentation offloading for FreeBSD Ted Unangst, LibreSSL Shawn Webb, Introducing ASLR In FreeBSD Ed Maste, The LLDB Debugger in FreeBSD Philip Guenther, Secure lazy binding *** OpenBSD adopts SipHash (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=141614801713457&w=2) Even more DJB crypto somehow finds its way into OpenBSD's base system This time it's SipHash (https://131002.net/siphash/), a family of pseudorandom functions that's resistant to hash bucket flooding attacks while still providing good performance After an initial import (http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/sys/crypto/siphash.c?rev=1.1&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup) and some clever early usage (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=141604896822253&w=2), a few developers agreed that it would be better to use it in a lot more places It will now be used in the filesystem, and the plan is to utilize it to protect all kernel hash functions Some other places (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_12_18-cryptocrystalline) that Bernstein's work can be found in OpenBSD include the ChaCha20-Poly1305 authenticated stream cipher and Curve25519 KEX used in SSH, ChaCha20 used in the RNG, and Ed25519 keys used in signify (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_02_05-time_signatures) and SSH *** FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/announce.html) FreeBSD's release engineering team (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013-09-11_engineering_powder_kegs) likes to troll us by uploading new versions just a few hours after we finish recording an episode The first maintenance update for the 10.x branch is out, improving upon a lot of things found in 10.0-RELEASE The vt driver was merged from -CURRENT and can now be enabled with a loader.conf switch (and can even be used on a PlayStation 3) Bhyve has gotten quite a lot of fixes and improvements from its initial debut in 10.0, including boot support for ZFS Lots of new ARM hardware is supported now, including SMP support for most of them A new kernel selection menu was added to the loader, so you can switch between newer and older kernels at boot time 10.1 is the first to support UEFI booting on amd64, which also has serial console support now Lots of third party software (OpenSSH, OpenSSL, Unbound..) and drivers have gotten updates to newer versions It's a worthy update from 10.0, or a good time to try the 10.x branch if you were avoiding the first .0 release, so grab an ISO (http://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ISO-IMAGES-amd64/10.1/) or upgrade (https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=freebsd-update) today Check the detailed release notes (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/relnotes.html) for more information on all the changes Also take a look at some of the known problems (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/errata.html#open-issues) to see if (https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/segmentation-fault-while-upgrading-from-10-0-release-to-10-1-release.48977/) you'll (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2014-October/080599.html) be (https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/10-0-10-1-diocaddrule-operation-not-supported-by-device.49016/) affected (https://www.reddit.com/r/freebsd/comments/2mmzzy/101release_restart_problems_anyone/) by any of them PC-BSD was also updated accordingly (http://wiki.pcbsd.org/index.php/What%27s_New/10.1) with some of their own unique features and changes *** arc4random - Randomization for All Occasions (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWmLWx8ut20) Theo de Raadt gave an updated version of his EuroBSDCon presentation at Hackfest 2014 in Quebec The presentation is mainly about OpenBSD's arc4random function, and outlines the overall poor state of randomization in the 90s and how it has evolved in OpenBSD over time It begins with some interesting history on OpenBSD and how it became a security-focused OS - in 1996, their syslogd got broken into and "suddenly we became interested in security" The talk also touches on how low-level changes can shake up the software ecosystem and third party packages that everyone uses There's some funny history on the name of the function (being called arc4random despite not using RC4 anymore) and an overall status update on various platforms' usage of it Very detailed and informative presentation, and the slides can be found here (http://www.openbsd.org/papers/hackfest2014-arc4random/index.html) A great quote from the beginning: "We consider ourselves a community of (probably rather strange) people who work on software specifically for the purpose of trying to make it better. We take a 'whole-systems' approach: trying to change everything in the ecosystem that's under our control, trying to see if we can make it better. We gain a lot of strength by being able to throw backwards compatibility out the window. So that means that we're able to do research and the minute that we decide that something isn't right, we'll design an alternative for it and push it in. And if it ends up breaking everybody's machines from the previous stage to the next stage, that's fine because we'll end up in a happier place." *** Interview - Justin Cormack - justin@netbsd.org (mailto:justin@netbsd.org) / @justincormack (https://twitter.com/justincormack) NetBSD on Xen, rump kernels, various topics News Roundup The FreeBSD foundation's biggest donation (http://freebsdfoundation.blogspot.com/2014/11/freebsd-foundation-announces-generous.html) The FreeBSD foundation has a new blog post about the largest donation they've ever gotten From the CEO of WhatsApp comes a whopping one million dollars in a single donation It also has some comments from the donor about why they use BSD and why it's important to give back Be sure to donate to the foundation of whatever BSD you use when you can - every little bit helps, especially for OpenBSD (http://www.openbsd.org/donations.html), NetBSD (https://www.netbsd.org/donations/) and DragonFly (http://www.dragonflybsd.org/donations/) who don't have huge companies supporting them regularly like FreeBSD does *** OpenZFS Dev Summit 2014 videos (http://open-zfs.org/wiki/OpenZFS_Developer_Summit) Videos from the recent OpenZFS developer summit are being uploaded, with speakers from different represented platforms and companies Matt Ahrens (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_05_14-bsdcanned_goods), opening keynote (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnTzbisLYzg) Raphael Carvalho, Platform Overview: ZFS on OSv (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJLOBLSRoHE) Brian Behlendorf, Platform Overview: ZFS on Linux (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MVOpMNV7LY) Prakash Surya, Platform Overview: illumos (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtlGt3ag0o0) Xin Li, Platform Overview: FreeBSD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xO0x5_3A1X4) All platforms, Group Q&A Session (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4UlT0RmSCc) Dave Pacheco, Manta (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEoCMpdB8WU) Saso Kiselkov, Compression (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZF92taa_us) George Wilson (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_12_04-zettabytes_for_days), Performance (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deJc0EMKrM4) Tim Feldman, Host-Aware SMR (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b1yqjV8qemU) Pavel Zakharov, Fast File Cloning (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4c4gsLi1LI) The audio is pretty poor (https://twitter.com/OpenZFS/status/534005125853888512) on all of them unfortunately *** BSDTalk 248 (http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2014/11/bsdtalk248-dragonflybsd-with-matthew.html) Our friend Will Backman is still busy getting BSD interviews as well This time he sits down with Matthew Dillon, the lead developer of DragonFly BSD We've never had Dillon on the show, so you'll definitely want to give this one a listen They mainly discuss all the big changes coming in DragonFly's upcoming 4.0 release *** MeetBSD 2014 videos (https://www.meetbsd.com/) The presentations from this year's MeetBSD conference are starting to appear online as well Kirk McKusick (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013-10-02_stacks_of_cache), A Narrative History of BSD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEEr6dT-4uQ) Jordan Hubbard (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_11_27-bridging_the_gap), FreeBSD: The Next 10 Years (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mri66Uz6-8Y) Brendan Gregg, Performance Analysis (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvKMptfXtdo) The slides can be found here (https://www.meetbsd.com/agenda/) *** Feedback/Questions Dominik writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20PXjp55N) Steven writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2LwEYT3bA) Florian writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2ubK8vQVt) Richard writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s216Eq8nFG) Kevin writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s21D2ugDUy) *** Mailing List Gold Contributing without code (https://www.marc.info/?t=141600819500004&r=1&w=2) Compression isn't a CRIME (https://lists.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-dev/2014-November/033176.html) Securing web browsers (https://www.marc.info/?t=141616714600001&r=1&w=2) ***