

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
Jupiter Broadcasting
Every audio version of Jupiter Broadcasting's productions.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 23, 2018 • 0sec
A Thoughtful Episode | BSD Now 273
Thoughts on NetBSD 8.0, Monitoring love for a GigaBit OpenBSD firewall, cat’s source history, X.org root permission bug, thoughts on OpenBSD as a desktop, and NomadBSD review.

Nov 22, 2018 • 0sec
What’s Up with WireGuard | TechSNAP 390
WireGuard has a lot of buzz around it and for many good reasons. We’ll explain what WireGuard is specifically, what it can do, and maybe more importantly, what it can’t.Special Guest: Jim Salter.Links:How to easily configure WireGuard — At its core, all WireGuard does is create an interface from one computer to another.Jessie Frazelle's Blog: Installing and Using Wireguard, obviously with containers — What is cool about Wireguard is it integrates into the Linux networking stack.WireGuard Didn't Make it To The Mainline Linux Kernel This Cycle — The code continues to be improved upon but looks like it came up just short of making it into this current development cycle. WireGuard VPN review: A new type of VPN offers serious advantages — Fewer lines of code, simpler setup, and better algorithms make a strong case.
The Current Status of WireGuard VPNs - Are We There Yet?Using a free VPN? Why not skip the middleman and just send your data to President Xi?Feedback from CodyNRE Labs — NRE Labs is a no-strings-attached, community-centered initiative to bring the skills of automation within reach for everyoneIntroduction to Antidote — Antidote is an open-source project aimed at making automated network operations more accessible with fast, easy and fun learning.StackStorm — From simple if/then rules to complicated workflows, StackStorm lets you automate DevOps your way.wireguard-private-networking: Build your own multi server private network using wireguard and ansibleAlgo: Set up a personal IPSEC or WireGuard VPN in the cloud

Nov 20, 2018 • 0sec
Very Long Term Support | LINUX Unplugged 276
Android and Ubuntu are working exceptionally hard to create longer support cycles. We’ll highlight the work that makes this possible, and what’s motivating these two different projects to strive for Very Long Term Support.
Plus Chris reviews how his new Thunderbolt 3 GPU docking station works under Linux, and why he’ll never be undocking again.Special Guests: Alan Pope, Brent Gervais, and Martin Wimpress.Links:Pioneers — Pioneers, the wonderfully addicting game based on "The Settlers of Catan"XPRA — multi-platform screen and application forwarding system
or "screen for X11"Valve discontinues the Steam Link — Farewell to the Steam Link, the best wireless HDMI gadget ever madeBringing the Android kernel back to the mainline — Android devices are based on the Linux kernel but, since the beginning, those devices have not run mainline kernels.Linux Deepin 15.8 Released with Various Neat ImprovementsUbuntu 18.04 LTS is getting 10-Year SupportUbuntu Security PodcastLINUX Unplugged Feedback: Docking Stations? Lenovo G0A10170UL Thunderbolt 3 Graphics DockLenovo Thunderbolt 3 Dock on Debian Linux | The Blog of JuhoThunderbolt 3 device managerprime-select: A fork of FedoraPrime enhanced for all linux distributionsBlack Friday Sale | Linux AcademyName the Automation System — Which two names work best for the Jupiter Broadcasting Automation system?Feedback from Albert: Youtube on the Desktop?Minitube, YouTube app for Mac, Windows and Linuxyoutube-dl — youtube-dl is a command-line program to download videos from YouTubewebtty: Share a terminal session over WebRTCunite-shell: Unite makes GNOME Shell look like Ubuntu Unity Shell.

Nov 18, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 80
Mark Shuttleworth announced 10 years support of Ubuntu 18.04, but there's a catch. Why we're buying the new Raspberry Pi, and we have a laugh at folding Android screens.
Plus the new Red Hat Enterprise beta has modularity, why Canonical might be ready for investors, and the bad week for cryptocurrencies. Links:New mid-range Raspberry Pi launched — TL;DR: you can now get the 1.4GHz clock speed, 5GHz wireless networking and improved thermals of Raspberry Pi 3B+ in a smaller form factor, and at the smaller price of $25.Raspbian updated — Today we’re releasing a new update for Raspbian, including a multimedia player, updated Thonny, and more.Kodak's new 3D printer has a Raspberry Pi insideAndroid prepares for folding screens — The multi-resume feature now makes it possible for multiple apps to be open and actually be running at the same time. Google is now allowing manufacturers to keep all apps resumed/active when in multi-window. Essential launches $149 clip-on headphone jack — It’s the $149 magnetic headphone jack adapter Essential promised way back in September 2017. The company first announced in June that the accessory would start shipping in the summer, but it apparently missed that deadline.Ubuntu 18.04 will be supported for 10 years — "I'm delighted to announce that Ubuntu 18.04 will be supported for a full 10 years," said ShuttleworthUbuntu Advantage — $2,500 cart minimum applies.Canonical looking for investors — Shuttleworth likens this program of getting the company ready to IPO to getting fit. “There’s no point in saying: I haven’t done any exercise in the last 10 years but I’m going to sign up for tomorrow’s marathon,” he said.RHEL 8 beta released — Allows updating user space without breaking everything.Cryptocurrency market tanks — Within one brutal hour yesterday, Bitcoin’s price plummeted by around $800. The coin is trading under $5,800 for the first time since its October 2017 boom

Nov 15, 2018 • 0sec
Detain the bhyve | BSD Now 272
Byproducts of reading OpenBSD’s netcat code, learnings from porting your own projects to FreeBSD, OpenBSD’s unveil(), NetBSD’s Virtual Machine Monitor, what 'dependency' means in Unix init systems, jailing bhyve, and more.

Nov 15, 2018 • 0sec
The Future of HTTP | TechSNAP 389
Wes is joined by special guest Jim Salter to discuss Google's recent BGP outage and the future of HTTP.
Plus the latest router botnet, why you should never go full UPnP, and the benefits of building your own home router.Special Guest: Jim Salter.Links:Google goes down after major BGP mishap routes traffic through China — Google lost control of several million of its IP addresses for more than an hour on Monday in an event that intermittently made its search and other services unavailable to many users.Internet Vulnerability Takes Down GoogleChina has been 'hijacking the vital internet backbone of western countries'RPKI - The required cryptographic upgrade to BGP routingHTTP/3 — The protocol that's been called HTTP-over-QUIC for quite some time has now changed name and will officially become HTTP/3.HTTP/3: Come for the speed, stay for the securityThe Road to QUICBotnet pwns 100,000 routers using ancient security flaw — Researchers have stumbled on another large botnet that’s been quietly hijacking home routers while nobody was paying attentionBCMPUPnP_Hunter: A 100k Botnet Turns Home Routers to Email SpammersFrom Zero to ZeroDay Journey: Router HackingThe Ars guide to building a Linux router from scratch

Nov 13, 2018 • 0sec
Year of the Relevant Desktop | LINUX Unplugged 275
Christian F.K. Schaller from Red Hat joins us to discuss seamless Linux upgrades, replacing PulseAudio, some of the recent desktop Projects Red Hat’s been working on... And the value they get from them.
Plus a big batch of important community news, Wimpy’s Thunderbolt Dock experiments, and way to run pacman on any Linux distribution.Special Guests: Alan Pope, Christian F.K. Schaller, and Martin Wimpress.Links:Radio GardenPlayStation Classic relies on open source emulator for its 20 games - SlashGear — Kotaku got some early hands-on time with the PlayStation Classic and discovered that it uses the PCSX ReARMed emulator.snes9x — For those packaging the GTK+ port, note that building with GTK+ 3 is now highly recommended over GTK+ 2 and should have no regressions. Also note that Wayland compatibility is implemented, which, if enabled, also requires GTK+ to have been compiled with Wayland support. Canonical’s Mark Shuttleworth says he has no plans to sell anytime soon — “I value my independence,” he told me during a brief chat on the outskirts of the OpenStack Summit in Berlin today. In part, that’s because he simply doesn’t personally need the money but also because he’d like to see through to the end his vision for Canonical and UbuntuOpen Invention Network Expands Linux Definition — The expansion includes 151 new packages, bringing the total number of protected packages to 2,873. “With this update to the Linux System definition, OIN continues with its well-established process of carefully maintaining a balance between stability and innovative core open source technology,” stated Mirko Boehm, OIN’s director for the Linux System definition. “While the majority of the new additions are widely used and found in most devices, the update includes a number of key open source innovations such as Kubernetes, Apache Cassandra and packages for Automotive Grade Linux.”Bitwarden Completes Third-party Security Audit — We are pleased to announce that Bitwarden has completed a thorough security audit and cryptographic analysis from the security experts at Cure53.Adding an optional install duration to LVFS firmware — We’ve just added an optional feature to fwupd and the LVFS that some people might find useful: The firmware update process can now tell the user how long in seconds the update is going to take.Help wanted - SuperTuxKart networking testersSupertuxkartPipeWire Hackfest — The event kicked off with Wim Taymans presenting on current state of PipeWire and outlining the remaining issues and current thoughts on how to resolve them. Most of the first day was spent on a roadtable discussion about what are and should be the goals of PipeWire and what potential tradeoffs there would be going forward.Thunderbolt 3 GPU Dock — Integrated NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 graphics card. Automation System Name Poll — Vote on the Automation System name.Junest — The lightweight Arch Linux based distro that runs upon any Linux distros without root access.

Nov 11, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 79
Ubuntu on select Samsung devices goes into beta, we cover the technicalities of Linux on the new Macs, one of our favorite desktop projects gets a big update, and the Librem 5 slips.
Plus it's the end of the line for the Nexus devices, and more!Links:Booting Linux on new Macs — Apple's T2 security chip being embedded into their newest products provides a secure enclave, APFS storage encryption, UEFI Secure Boot validation, Touch ID handling, a hardware microphone disconnect on lid close, and other security tasks. The T2 restricts the boot process quite a bit and verifies each step of the process using crypto keys signed by Apple. WSL gets new features — A slate of improvements to the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) feature in the Windows 10 October 2018 Update. Samsung announce Linux on DeX — Samsung is announcing the beta launch of Linux on DeX which extends the value of Samsung DeX to Linux developers. Linux on DeX empowers developers to build apps within a Linux development environment by connecting their Galaxy device to a larger screen for a PC-like experience.Linux on DexKDE Connect Updated — Android Oreo introduced some restrictions in regard to apps running in the background. In the future in order to be able to run in the background KDE Connect needs to show a persistent notification. The good news is that you can hide the notification. The (slightly) bad news is that we cannot do it by default. To hide the notification you need to long-press it and switch it off. Other notifications from KDE Connect are unaffected by this.GSConnect updated — The GNOME Shell UI has been rewritten to better conform to design guidelines. Appearance is important to everyone and work will continue to improve usability for touchscreens, HiDPI and users requiring accessibility features. Librem 5 slips again — I am reluctant to give a new timeline for shipping the dev kits… What we know is that our new PCB fabrication here in the USA will be 11 business days. We will make over 300 of these boards, which are pretty complex—we have over 160 different parts and more than 500 components in total per board. This takes some time, even with the amazing SMT machines placing tiny parts.Nexus devices finally dead — An over-the-air (OTA) update, which is based on Android 8.1 Oreo, is now rolling out to both the Nexus 5X and the Nexus 6P (as well as to the Pixel/Pixel XL, the Pixel 2/Pixel 2 XL, and Pixel 3/Pixel 3 XL), bumping up both phones to the latest November security patches. But if Google’s update policies are to be followed here, then this will be the last update to be released to both Nexus phones, meaning that the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P have now officially reached end-of-life (EOL) status. Furthermore, online and phone support for both devices is also being discontinued.

Nov 9, 2018 • 0sec
Little Packages of Joy | User Error 52
What's the best strategy when it comes to desktop Linux applications? We look at both ends of the spectrum, and wonder how much big tech companies should dictate who has access to their platforms.
Plus some solid #AskError questions, having kids, and our new forum at community.error.show.

Nov 8, 2018 • 0sec
Automatic Drive Tests | BSD Now 271
MidnightBSD 1.0 released, MeetBSD review, EuroBSDcon trip reports, DNS over TLS in FreeBSD 12, Upgrading OpenBSD with Ansible, how to use smartd to run tests on your drives automatically, and more.


