

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
Jupiter Broadcasting
Every audio version of Jupiter Broadcasting's productions.
Episodes
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Jul 2, 2020 • 0sec
Slow Cooked Servers | Self-Hosted 22
Chris is slow cooking some servers, Alex has self-hosted AI with a nasty gotcha and a damp basement.Links:Build The BEST Security Camera NVR — Free Locally Processed AI Computer Vision with Blue Iris. Free AI Person Detection for Blue Iris — This program analyzes motion in Blue Iris cameras in real-time using Artificial Intelligence. Deep Stack AI — This system uses Docker containers to run DeepStack AI and process images from a watch folder, then fires a set of registered triggers to make web request calls, send MQTT events, and send Telegram messages when specified objects are detected in the images.Aeotec Multisensor 6 — Z-Wave Plus 6-in1 motion, temperature, humidity, light, UV, vibration sensorGitea — Gitea is a community managed lightweight code hosting solution written in Go. It is published under the MIT license.

Jun 30, 2020 • 0sec
The Hard Work of Hardware | LINUX Unplugged 360
We're joined by two guests who share their insights into building modern Linux hardware products.
Plus we try out Mint 20, cover some big Gnome fixes, and a very handy open source noise suppression pick!Special Guests: Alfred Neumayer, Brent Gervais, Drew DeVore, and Jeremy Soller.Links:CutiePi Tablet - Raspberry Pi, Untethered by Phoebus Torralba — Kickstarter
CutiePi Is World’s Thinnest, Hackable Raspberry Pi Tablet, Available for Pre-Order Now
CutiePi Shell - The UI for the CutiePi tablet
GNOME’s Window Rendering Culling Was Broken Leading To Wasted Performance
Linux Mint 20 Cinnamon RELEASED
linuxmint/warpinator: Share files across the LAN
Snap Store — Linux Mint User Guide documentation
Monthly News – May 2020 – The Linux Mint Blog
The Hunt for the Oryx Pro [Video]
System76 Blog — Things We Love About the New Oryx Pro
Oryx Pro - System76 Store
New high-end Linux laptop: System76’s Oryx Pro packs latest Intel Core i7 H-series CPU
Jeremy Soller on Twitter: “Spying on I2C traffic”
Ubuntu Touch Q&A 78
UBports GSI brings Ubuntu Touch to any Project Treble-supported Android device
cadmus: A GUI frontend for @werman’s Pulse Audio real-time noise suppression plugin
werman/noise-suppression-for-voice: Noise suppression plugin based on Xiph’s RNNoise
RNNoise: Learning Noise Suppression
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Jun 23, 2020 • 0sec
Death of the Mac | LINUX Unplugged 359
Why we think Apple just handed market share to Desktop Linux, and why you can kiss running Linux on the Mac goodbye forever.Special Guests: Drew DeVore and Neal Gompa.Links:Generating cooking recipes using TensorFlow and a LSTM Recurrent Neural Network
ARM-based Japanese supercomputer is now the fastest in the world
Ampere donates Arm64 server hardware to Debian to fortify the Arm ecosystem
Google’s Bringing Its Apple AirDrop Rival to Linux, Windows, and Mac
Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar!
Pay it forward: Help us give away 1,000 ACG subscriptions
Apple is switching Macs to its own processors starting later this year
Tim Cook says first Mac with Apple Silicon shipping to consumers by end of this year
r/linux: How will Apple’s ARM announcement affecting Linux going forward?
r/linux: Let’s suppose Apple goes ARM, MS follows its footsteps and does the same. What will happen to Linux then? Will we go back to “unlocking bootloaders”?
Jared Domínguez on Twitter — Today’s cynical take: Apple supporting Linux VMs is a way to make devs feel good with minimal effort (offload the work to Parallels/BSD community) while allowing Apple to deprecate their already super stale Unix userland. macOS itself will become less accessible.unsilence: Console Interface and Library to remove silent parts of a media file 🔈

Jun 19, 2020 • 0sec
Brunch with Brent: Philip Müller | Jupiter Extras 74
Brent sits down with Philip Müller, Co-Founder and Lead Developer of Manjaro, and CEO at Manjaro GmbH & Co. KG. We explore the formation and evolution of Manjaro as a Linux distribution, the development of past and recent hardware partnerships, cross-distribution collaborations, and what's inspiring Philip in the next 5 years.Special Guest: Philip Müller.Links:ManjaroManjaro Webdad (JADE Desktop)Manjaro HardwareStationX Announces New Laptop Customized for Manjaro Linux - It's FOSSLINUX Unplugged - Special Guest: Philip MullerPINE64Snapcraft — Snaps are universal Linux packagesBrunch with Brent: Martin WimpressBrunch with Brent: Alan PopeFOSDEMPinePhone - PINE64Pinebook Pro - PINE64Pi-hole — A black hole for Internet advertisementsFlatpak — the future of application distributionPhilip Müller - philm a Manjaro forumsBrent Gervais - @brentgervais on Twitter

Jun 18, 2020 • 0sec
The Perfect Server Build | Self-Hosted 21
Serverbuilds.net’s founder JDM joins us to discuss the perfect sever for low or high-end needs, and Alex stages a Pi intervention.Special Guest: JDMWAAAT.Links:Serverbuilds.netCPU comparison — Intel Xeon CPU Comparison SpreadsheetUseful tools — Serverbuilds.netJDMWAAAT - YouTubeserverbuilds.net Discordserverbuilds.net Forums[Guide] Create a mobile media server setup with Plex's new app - Resources / General Information

Jun 16, 2020 • 0sec
Our Fragmented Favorite | LINUX Unplugged 358
It's time to challenge some long-held assumptions.
Today's Btrfs is not yesterday's hot mess, but a modern battle-tested filesystem, and we'll prove it.
Plus our thoughts on Github dropping the term "master", and the changes Linux should make NOW to compete with commercial desktops.Special Guests: Brent Gervais, Drew DeVore, and Neal Gompa.Links:SpaceX: We’ve launched 32,000 Linux computers into space for Starlink internet
Issue #54: Default disk partitioning layout for Workstation - fedora-workstation - Pagure.io
16 Jun, MEETING AGENDA - desktop - Fedora Mailing-Lists
[Discussion] What do we think about Github’s decision to start using main instead of master as a branch name?
ZFS co-creator boots ‘slave’ out of OpenZFS codebase, says ‘casual use’ of term is ‘unnecessary reference to a painful experience’
OpenZFS: Remove unnecessary references to slavery
GitHub will no longer use the term ‘master’ as default branch because of negative association - r/programming
Community Central: Welcoming Nomenclature - YouTube
PinePhone: postmarketOS community edition
PineTab sold out in 72 hours.
Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar!
Pay it forward: Help us give away 1,000 ACG subscriptions

Jun 9, 2020 • 0sec
The Little Distro That Could | LINUX Unplugged 357
The lightweight distro that stole our hearts, the four of us each try out a different contender and come away with what we think will be the leanest and meanest distribution for your PC.Special Guests: Drew DeVore and Jill Bryant Ryniker.Links:BunsenLabs Linux
Puppy Linux Home
The FreeBSD Project
SparkyLinux
KolibriOS official site
antiX Linux

Jun 4, 2020 • 0sec
One is None | Self-Hosted 20
You're not a true self-hoster until you've lost your entire configuration at least once. Alex does a deep dive into cloud backup, plus we need your help to find the right Wifi solution for a listener.Links:LINUX Unplugged 355: Chris' Data Crisis — Chris' tale of woe after a recent data loss, and Wes' adventure after he finds a rogue device on his network.Jupiter Extras: A Chat with mergerfs Developer Antonio Musumeci — mergerfs makes JBOD (Just a Bunch Of Drives) appear like an ‘array’ of drives. mergerfs transparently translates read/write commands to the underlying drives from a single mount point, such as /mnt/storage.Duplicati — Duplicati works with standard protocols like FTP, SSH, WebDAV as well as popular services like Backblaze B2, Microsoft OneDrive, Amazon S3, Google Drive, box.com, Mega, hubiC and many others.restic · Backups done right! — Backing up your data with restic should only be limited by your network or hard disk bandwidth so that you can backup your files every day. Backblaze — Cloud storage that's astonishingly easy and low-cost.How does Backblaze support Linux Users? — There are a variety of options for using Linux with B2. These include open-source (free) and commercial applications, command-line (CLI) and graphical interface (GUI) tools, and tools that include encryption, automation, hybrid NAS/B2 support, mounting remote archives as volumes, and other capabilities.How to configure Backblaze B2 with Duplicity on Linux — Duplicity can store backup data in many destinations, including Backblaze B2. This guide will help you get setup and give you the commands to do a full backup and restore of a specific folder.duplicity — Duplicity backs directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server.rsync.net — We give you an empty UNIX filesystem that you can access with any SSH toolAmazon S3 Glacier — Long-term, secure, durable Amazon S3 object storage classes for data archiving, starting at $1 per terabyte per monthInstallation Methods & Community Guides Wiki - Home Assistant — Today I want to take a step back and take a holistic view of installation methods. What installation methods do we support as a project, and what does supported mean.TiddlyWiki — a non-linear personal web notebook — A unique non-linear notebook for capturing, organising and sharing complex information.An opinionated approach to TiddlyWiki

Jun 3, 2020 • 0sec
Linux Hardware Love | LINUX Unplugged 356
From the low-end to the high-end we try out both ends of the Linux hardware spectrum. Wes reviews the latest XPS 13, and Chris shares his thoughts on the Pinebook Pro.
Plus a really cool new feature in Linux 5.7, and we get some answers to the recent GNOME patent settlement from the source.Special Guests: Dan Johansen and Drew DeVore.Links:snakeware: A free Linux distro with a fully Python userspace
GNOME gets big open-source patent win
GNOME Patent Suite Update
GNOME Foundation post about patent suit resolution
Thermal Pressure in the task scheduler
A New Kernel Patch Is Being Discussed That’s Needed For Newer Windows Games On Wine
PINE64 on Twitter: “Everyone receiving their #PinebookPro laptops. Appears that the factory has left the WiFi privacy switches turned ON. To enable WiFi you’ll need to disengage the privacy switch"
Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar!
Pay it forward: Help us give away 1,000 ACG subscriptions
Introducing the 2020 XPS 13 Developer Edition — (this one goes to 32!)
XPS 13 in the Dell Store
Wes' XPS 13 Image Gallery
Performance comparison to Lemur Pro
Jim’s take on the new XPS 13
Howdy: Windows Hello style facial authentication for Linux
Feedback: Why not LVM/XFS?

May 28, 2020 • 0sec
All Good Things | TechSNAP 430
It's a storage showdown as Jim and Wes bust some performance myths about RAID and ZFS.
Plus our favorite features from Fedora 32, and why Wes loves DNF.Links:What's new in Fedora 32 Workstation
Fedora 32 ChangeSet
Linux distro review: Fedora Workstation 32
TechSNAP 428: RAID Reality Check
ZFS versus RAID: Eight Ironwolf disks, two filesystems, one winner
Understanding RAID: How performance scales from one disk to eight
Find Jim on 2.5 AdminsFind Wes on LINUX UnpluggedTechSNAP 1: First episode of TechSNAP (in 2011!)
TechSNAP 300: End of the Allan and Chris era (2017)
TechSNAP 301: Enter Dan and Wes
TechSNAP 347: A Farewell to Dan
TechSNAP 348: Chris is back!
TechSNAP 389: Jim's first time as a guest
TechSNAP 390: Jim's second guest appearance
TechSNAP 393: Chris says goodbye
TechSNAP 395: Jim joins the show


