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Jupiter Broadcasting
Every audio version of Jupiter Broadcasting's productions.
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Mar 21, 2018 • 0sec
AMD Flaws Explained | TechSNAP 360
We cut through the noise and explain in clear terms what’s really been discovered. The botched disclosure of flaws in AMD products has overshadowed the technical details of the vulnerabilities, and we aim to fix that..
Plus another DNS Rebinding attack is in the wild and stealing Ethereum, Microsoft opens up a new bug bounty program, Expedia gets hacked, and we perform a TechSNAP checkup.

Mar 20, 2018 • 0sec
Analytica Aftermath | Unfilter 273
The twisted way that data about you and your family is used to manipulate the way you feel about hot button topics gets exposed when a Cambridge Analytica whistleblower reveals all.
Plus Trump’s had a busy week, the high-note is quick, and the Overtime is packed!

Mar 20, 2018 • 0sec
Getting Started with Chef | Ask Noah 55
This week on the show we bring you the industry experts to teach you more than you ever wanted to know about Chef. Learn how to automate your entire system. Plus uber's self driving car kills someone & we give you our take, all that and more in this weeks episode.
-- The Cliff Notes --
Open Source Version of WebOS
WebOS OSE
Private Internet Access goes Open Source
PIA Tested in FBI Case
First Fatal Crash with Uber Self Driving Car
Microsoft joins group working to 'cure' open-source licensing issues
Open Source Visitor Software
Chef Getting Started Guide
Keep Your Children Safe
Dell Mini Computer
15" Depth Case
Behind The Ask Noah Show
See How the Ask Noah Show Got Started (video)
VoxTeleSys
-- Stay In Touch --
Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard
Ask Noah Dashboard
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
Contact Noah
asknoah [at] jupiterbroadcasting.com
-- Twitter --
Noah - Kernellinux
Ask Noah Show
Altispeed Technologies
Jupiter Broadcasting

Mar 19, 2018 • 0sec
Snitching on SCaLE | LUP 241
We’re playing just one interview from SCaLE this year, tons of community news, and two handy app picks.
Plus webOS returns, some fundamental Linux plumping upgrades, and Private Internet Access goes Open Source.
Links
LG Announces webOS Open-Source Edition
LG in cooperation with South Korea's NIPA government agency are working on making webOS suitable as a more open platform with open connectivity. They are still looking to commercialize it as an open-source platform, LG announced this morning.
GNOME 3.28 Release Notes
GNOME 3.28 is the latest version of GNOME 3, and is the result of 6 months’ hard work by the GNOME community. It contains major new features, as well as many smaller improvements and bug fixes. In total, the release incorporates 25832 changes, made by approximately 838 contributors.
Bolt Will Tackle Thunderbolt 3 Security on Linux
TING
**Ting - mobile that makes sense
New Major GStreamer Release
The GStreamer team is proud to announce a new major feature release of your favourite cross-platform multimedia framework!
Firefox 59 released, these are the key changes
Performance enhancements to the Firefox Home page mean it should now load quicker than before. The speed up comes by leveraging cache files.
Off-Main-Thread Painting - https://t.co/3MllKmqOaOOn Linux it has to be enabled manually: set “layers.omtp.enabled” to true.— Adam Brodziak (@AdamBrodziak) March 19, 2018
Private Internet Access goes Open Source
Today marks the start of an exciting shift over here at Private Internet Access. As long-time supporters of the Free and Open Source Software community, we have started the process of open sourcing our software, and over the next six months we will be releasing the source code for all our client-side applications, as well as libraries and extensions.
DigitalOcean
DigitalOcean: SSD Cloud Server, VPS Server, Simple Cloud Hosting
OpenSnitch
OpenSnitch is a GNU/Linux port of the Little Snitch application firewall.
Spotifyd: A spotify daemon
An open source Spotify client running as a UNIX daemon. Spotifyd streams music just like the official client, but is more lightweight, and supports more platforms. Spotifyd also supports the Spotify Connect protocol, which makes it show up as a device that can be controlled from the official clients.
Spotifyd requires a Spotify Premium account.
Linux Academy
Linux Academy | Linux and AWS Online Training
SCaLE16x Report
Ilan Rabinovitch (@irabinovitch) | Twitter
VP, Product & Technical Community at @datadoghq, recovering SysAdmin, SCALE Conference Chair, and other FL/OSS fun.

Mar 19, 2018 • 0sec
Unethical Data Experiment | T3 268
Cambridge Analytica's use of Facebook data was a 'grossly unethical experiment' coming to light thanks to a whistleblower. We'll play his story, and discuss what they did with the data.
Plus Google, Target, and Walmart's unholy alliance to battle Amazon and Twitter's Cryptocoin crackdown.
Links
Uber Halts Autonomous-Car Testing After Fatal Arizona Crash --- The 49-year-old woman, Elaine Herzberg, was crossing the road outside of a crosswalk when the Uber vehicle operating in autonomous mode under the supervision of a human safety driver struck her, according to the Tempe Police Department.
Google plans to boost Amazon competitors in search shopping ads --- Google made the announcement on its AdWords blog this morning, detailing an initiative called Shopping Actions. Through this feature, retailers can leverage a "universal cart" that allows customers to easily shop across mobile, desktop and voice-controlled devices. Basically, Google says this will make it much easier for you to shop by voice or with a phone/computer from a number of stores.
Cambridge Analytica harvested data from millions of unsuspecting Facebook users --- Cambridge Analytica, a company that profiled voters for Donald Trump's campaign, allegedly harvested private information from more than 50 million Facebook profiles, which they used to influence and wage a "culture war" during the 2016 election.
New York professor sues Cambridge Analytica to find out what it knows about him
Facebook wants more video creators to compete with YouTube, so it's rolling out a subscription feature - Recode --- Facebook will soon let you subscribe to your favorite creator for $5 a month.
GrayKey iPhone unlocker poses serious security concerns --- According to Forbes, the GrayKey iPhone unlocker device is marketed for in-house use at law enforcement offices or labs.
Twitter Will Ban Most Cryptocurrency-Related Ads --- Twitter plans to ban most cryptocurrency-related ads in the next few weeks, as Sky News first reported and a source confirms to Axios. Why it matters: The recent boom in cryptocurrencies and digital tokens has unsurprisingly attracted some fraudsters. Twitter is following in the footsteps of Facebook and Google, though it's been having its own problems with accounts promoting scams.

Mar 18, 2018 • 0sec
Being David | Coder Radio 301
Feedback
Matthew’s Email
Aaron Has Good Taste!
More weekend fun pic.twitter.com/IOUXAwRJBx— Michael Dominick (@dominucco) March 18, 2018
Hoopla
Amazon’s new GameOn API helps developers add eSports competitions to their games
GameOn is built-on top of AWS and designed to work cross platform; as long as the system your game is running on can make API calls — be it mobile, console, or a computer — it should all work just fine.
Facebook lets all PC games Live stream and reward viewers
Staying Small
David vs Goliath
What does it mean to be small and stay small
Does anyone really choose to stay small
Strategies for dealing with Goliath
Direct competition?
Avoidance?
Partnership?
Coder Shirt/Hoodie: https://t.co/igeyKHGlpdCoder Coasters: https://t.co/8o6Y6sy2C3Coder Poster: https://t.co/7L19aSs07Y pic.twitter.com/vqz9quEhG4— Coder Radio (@CoderRadioShow) March 19, 2018

Mar 16, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 45
Episode Links
GNOME 3.28 Released --- One major new feature for this release is automatic downloading of operating systems in Boxes, which takes the work out of creating and running virtual machines -- just pick the operating system that you want to create a virtual machine of, and Boxes will now download and install it for you.
GNOME 3.28 Release Notes
Firefox 59 released --- We launched an entirely new engine in November, made significant improvements to graphics rendering in January, and are continuing to post performance gains and add features with this release. On Firefox for desktop, we've improved page load times, added tools to annotate and crop your Firefox Screenshots, and made it easier to arrange your Top Sites on the Firefox Home page. On Firefox for Android, we've added support for sites that stream video using the HLS protocol. * Firefox is a Snap* Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+ --- Alongside a 200MHz increase in peak CPU clock frequency, we have roughly three times the wired and wireless network throughput, and the ability to sustain high performance for much longer periods.* US city bans new Bitcoin mining --- Plattsburgh, New York has imposed an 18-month moratorium on Bitcoin mining to prevent miners from using all the city's cheap electricity.
Let's Encrypt rolls out wildcard certs --- Free "wildcard" certificates to enable secure HTTP connections for entire domains. In addition to a new version of the Automated Certificate Management Environment (ACME) protocol, an interface that can be used by a variety of client software packages to automate verification of certificate requests.
TechSNAP Episode 359* Eric Raymond's open source UPS --- Last week, ESR opened up the work-in-progress on GitLab: the Upside project is currently defining requirements and developing a specification for a "high quality UPS that can be built from off-the-shelf parts in any reasonably well-equipped makerspace or home electronics shop".
Wil Wheaton runs Linux --- But about a week ago, something went wrong. Everything started slowing down like crazy, Chrome just quit working entirely, and even Firefox ran so slow, I felt like I was using a 386.


