Discussion about Roundcube joining Nextcloud family, vulnerabilities in ownCloud, anticipation for OpenCV 5. First impressions of Steam Deck OLED and Raspberry Pi 5. Mini KDE Korner highlights updates and features. Kolide promotes secure device access for apps.
RoundCube joining Nextcloud provides support and resources for the email client's active development and improvement to protect user data.
Using Raspberry Pi 5 as a desktop or server requires proper cooling and alternative options like X86 devices may be more suitable for server applications.
Deep dives
RoundCube joins the next Cloud family
RoundCube, a long-standing email client project, has joined the next Cloud family, which is seen as good news for RoundCube due to the support and resources provided by the bigger platform. Next Cloud allows users to disable default applications and embrace only what they need, avoiding feature creep.
The importance of active and secure email systems
The podcast episode highlights the importance of active and secure email systems, particularly when dealing with valuable and sensitive information. The discussion emphasizes the need for constant updates, security measures, and active development to protect user data.
Review of the Raspberry Pi 5 as a desktop and server
The hosts discuss their experiences with the Raspberry Pi 5 as both a desktop and server. While the Pi 5 offers noticeable improvements in performance compared to previous models, it requires a fan for proper cooling and can be noisy. They also compare power consumption and recommend considering alternative options, such as X86 devices, for server applications.
Our first impressions of two new hot bits of hardware – the Steam Deck OLED, and the Raspberry Pi 5. Plus great news for self-hosted webmail, a call to support open source AI/ML image processing, and a mini KDE Korner.
Kolide ensures that if a device isn’t secure, it can’t access your apps. It’s Device Trust for Okta. Watch the demo today to see how it works at kolide.com/latenightlinux