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682 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 914
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Title: HPR0914: Sunday Morning Linux Review: Episode 014
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0914/hpr0914.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 04:53:42
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---
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Welcome to the Saturday night edition of the Sunday morning when it's
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to do with that. Enders, don't you mean us? Mary Tommach. What's today's day? 14th January 14th, 2012.
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Third show of the year? Yes, third show of the year. 14th episode. And you know, the
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third time's the charm, they say, so. Right. Oh, we survived yesterday Friday the 13th.
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Barely my laptop died yesterday. And so. And so it died. It died. Completely or did
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some aspect of it. Hardware software. I don't know. It won't boot consistently. And
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sometimes the BIOS doesn't even come up. So what happened was I thought I was
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plugged into a power source and I wasn't. And I was just using it and using it and using it and using it.
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And then all of a sudden. Completely disregarding the little battery indicator. I wasn't paying
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attention. And all of a sudden the screen just goes, and I'm no lights. I'm like, oh, F. So then I
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plug it back in. And when I first plug it back in, I it wouldn't boot at all. Wouldn't do
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anything. I'm like, oh no. So then I let it sit for a while and rest plugged in. And then it booted,
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but it froze with only like half the desktop loaded. Like the start would pass this first
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start button down on the lower left. It wasn't loaded. And then the mouse and the keyboard stopped
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reacting. So then I had to hard boot out of that. And then sometimes the BIOS doesn't come up.
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If I turn it on, it just sits there forever. This was you were trying to boot mint, right?
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Mint has nothing to do with it. Have you tried pulling the battery out?
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I have not. Because it doesn't happen. And it doesn't boot consistently. It's sometimes when it comes
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up, the wireless isn't active. And I do an RF, I did an RF deal and RF kill set was fine.
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Maybe there's something. I don't know. But really the BIOS doesn't even grow up sometimes.
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So I don't know what the deal is. Yeah, but you could pull the battery out and boot it just
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strictly from the. But does a laptop still have a CMOS battery in them, don't they?
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Yeah. Yeah. So if I pull the battery out, what's good Zikim and do?
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If the battery is shorting out, it would cost things to stop working. So you pull the battery out
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and just run on power. Oh, you're an effing genius, dude.
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We're going to expect a report from you next week. I got it here when the show's over.
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I'm not sure I'll stick around with that. It happened on me for two or three laptops I've
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worked on. I've done that. Really? Yeah. And they work fine without the battery in them. Oh, yeah.
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And then when you plug the battery in, they say, hey, I few. Actually, it just doesn't do anything
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when you plug the battery in. This does. Sometimes it does nothing. Sometimes it boots. Sometimes it
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half boots. Sometimes the. Maybe just something's loose in there. Sometimes the radio works. Sometimes the
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radio doesn't work. But why would I think it's definitely got something to do with the battery?
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Because I totally killed it. And if you drain a battery, I don't know about a laptop battery,
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but like a car battery. If you drain it too much, you can actually reverse the polarity on the
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battery. Yeah. Well, laptop batteries are completely different. Yeah.
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Car batteries are really different. No positive negative posts on them. Even laptop batteries from
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five years ago, or 10 years ago, to the last couple of years, it comes totally different.
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Because the new ones don't you don't have any memory or anything anymore. Right. Because they're all
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lion batteries. Right. Where the previous ones, like what this laptop has, you know, that we're
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recording on. Right. It's probably has something either similar to what you have, or you have up
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to the new version. New kind. Yeah. There's like a six, it's like a six year old HP, I think.
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So I think it's most likely as an older style. The new ones, there's no recognition at all. I mean,
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if it goes bad, it's bad. You have to throw it away. But on your, you can actually recondition
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Yeah, I know. I had an old think pad that I had to do that too once. And it was like, it was
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amazing. It was down to like only 20 minutes of use on the battery. And then I did some research on
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the web and found out about this reconditioning. And I did it. And then I was getting like an hour
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and 40 minutes out of it. I'm like, well, you know, I've got a, I've got, and you probably don't
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remember this, but I have that. It's a wind book. And I had it before I got that Dell XPS
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before I got my. Yes, I think I do remember that. Well, that laptop is still limping along.
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But the battery is completely dead. I mean, if I unplug, if I unplug it from the power source,
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it, it dies. Yeah, I had, I had a really old think pad that was that way. Yeah. And I'm thinking
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that, well, I don't know if there's something that can be done for that particular battery,
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it may be just totally. I think at that point, that point is completely dead. It actually has
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shrugged out. It's time for Trump to batteries plus at that point. Okay. The other option is you
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can, you can actually replace the cells inside the battery. That's what battery plus does.
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They'll rebuild it. Oh, really? Okay. Oh, that's a good point. I'll, I'll try that.
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My old compact, the reason I was so hesitant to get rid of it or stop using it is because it had
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had a feature right in the BIOS to recondition the battery. That thing, when I first had it, when I
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first got it, it had maybe 10 minutes of battery life. I found that in the BIOS and I ran it.
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And the next day, it takes about 12 hours to run it. So I had to give it a whole day to run.
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And then, and then I tested it next day at four hours of battery life.
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Well, because I had the same thing in the think pad. And when, and when I did it, I went from like
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20 minutes up to like an hour and 20 minutes. Yeah. But it does, it goes through like four cycles of
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completely charging and completely charging and completely charging and discharging four cycles of
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that. That only works with the old lead acid stuff. Yeah.
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All right. Ready for the kernel news? Oh, I've been sitting on the edge of my seat.
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Just anticipation is killing me. Yes. All right.
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Matt, what's happening with the kernel? In the kernel news this week, there were no release
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candidates. And the mainline 3.2, there was no change. And the stable releases,
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Greg Cage announced the release of 2.6.32.54 kernel on 1.12. I got confused there because it's
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it was on the 12th and on the year is 12. So it was on 1.12 at 8.13 UCT UTC.
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There were 18 file changes, 167 files inserted and 66 files deleted. He also announced on 1.12
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that 3.0.17 was also going to be released. There were 52 files changed, 364 files inserted
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and 179 files deleted. And then again, he also announced that kernel 3.1.9 was released.
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And it had 53 file changes, 367 files inserted and 179 files deleted. And then believe it or not,
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there was also a stable update, the 3.2, even though it just became the stable kernel recently.
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And there were 63 files changed, 465 files inserted and 200 files deleted.
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And my kernel quote of the week is also from Greg Cage, which stands for Crow Hartman, by the way.
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Here's the, here's the different active kernel versions that I am maintaining at the moment.
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3.2.Y. This will be maintained until 3.3 comes out.
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3.1.Y. There will be only one or maybe two more releases of this tree. And then 3.0.Y.
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This is the new long-term kernel release. It will be maintained for two years at the minimum
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by me. And then there is 2.6.32.Y. This is the previous long-term kernel release.
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It is approaching its end of life, and I think I only have another month or so doing releases of this.
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After I am finished with it, it might be picked up by someone else, but I'm not going to promise anything.
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All other long-term kernels are being maintained in various forms, usually quite sporadically,
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if at all, by other people, and I cannot speak for their lifetime at all,
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that is up to those individuals. And that was a quote? That was a quote from Greg Crow Hartman.
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I was going to say that. That was a pretty lengthy quote.
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Hey, no. There was also a bit of a dust up between Tim Gardner of Canicle and Greg Crow Hartman
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on the kernel mailing list over the maintenance of the 2.6.32 kernel.
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Once Greg gives it up, it appears to have been started by a misunderstanding and a conclusion
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jumped by Tim, but it was Greg kind of bitch-slapty minute. It was kind of cool.
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I'd like to see those canicle guys get bitch-slap once in a while.
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Well, I suppose. Keep some in line, right? There you go. Sure.
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Oh, okay. Well, that was pretty good. Thank you, Matt. You're welcome. And that's the state
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of the kernel this week. All right. Tony, what's going on with the Linux distributions this week?
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We've got some distro releases this week. Starting back on last Sunday the 8th after we recorded,
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we had a release of, we're going to go Portius, 1.1. It's a Slackware-based live CD with a choice
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of Trinity, a KDE-3 fork, KDE-4 or the LXDE desktops. That KDE-3 fork is that that Trinity project?
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Oh, Trinity, yeah, never mind. I'll just be quiet now. Actually, Matt, it's your whole about
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everything you're against with KDE-4. I'm surprised you haven't, you're not running Trinity.
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I just discovered it like a week ago. Oh, yeah. But I'll tell you what, I'm that new cinnamon
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that the mint guys are making. I am digging that dust top. It has some little quirky glitches in it
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that made me drop back to run mate for most of the week, but I really liked running cinnamon. It was
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really cool. Cool. This is the January 14th update of Matt's over there with cinnamon.
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All right. When what other distros is Tony, are you going to tell us about?
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On the 10th, we have Fudentu. Fudentu? Fudentu? Yep. Do we skip over Ghost BSD?
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Ghost BSD? It was a ghost. We didn't even see it. I just got to stop talking this week.
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I am just all over the board. Yeah, it's all right. So we have, it's 2012.1. So they're quarter
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release of the updated distribution for Fort from Fedora last year. And that's the one where
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they forked Fudora to make it look like Ubuntu. Yes. That's why they called it Fudentu.
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I'm like, just get a life, guys. I mean, run Ubuntu, but we love the RPM. You're an idiot.
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Well, maybe they could write a, maybe they have written, I don't know much about it myself,
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but maybe they've written a script where you can just take alien and behind the scenes do all of that
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or something. I don't know. It's possible. Yeah. All right. And then we have asterix for?
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Asterix? Asterix. A-S-T-U-R-I-X. As I was going to say, asterix is a voice server.
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I know. When I saw that name, I thought it was going to be a voice server, but it's not.
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So Ubuntu based desktop distribution with customized desktop environment and many usability
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improvements. Another Ubuntu spin off. You know, I think what I'm going to do, maybe for next
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week is I'm going to go and I'm going to count how many there are. And I'll be put back during
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the summer. It's only a couple that's like blessed by Ubuntu. But then there's a ton that are
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spun off that, you know, that don't get the Ubuntu name, like these asterix. And although within
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yeah, but within the distro watch website, you can say what it's based on and show me, yeah,
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and say show me all of those. Yeah. And then we have a starro security gateway 8.3.
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I did not know they were a Linux based distro like that. I thought that the asterro gateway was
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Linux based just from what I've seen of it. But I did not know that they had that they released
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a distro. I thought they did like a red hat kind of a thing. And just if you wanted it, you had to go
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to their website and dig this stuff from wherever and compile. Well, I do know they do the enterprise
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level like routing and security stuff. Right. Right. Right. And I had looked into it, but it's
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I, uh, it looks pretty complicated when I was looking at it at the time. I'm not sure about
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any more. But, um, and like I said, maybe this is a newer thing where they're releasing it.
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Because I did look, I looked at quite a few firewalls about four or five years ago. And they
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didn't have a download available. Anyway, continuing on, we have web convergence 11. I know they had
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released just last month. Yeah, not too long ago. I remember you saying something about them.
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Yeah, but it's, uh, it's basically just a web browser on, uh, you know, Ubuntu or, uh, what do I see?
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Uh, you know, on Linux desktop and it's four internet kiosks. So there's not much they can do with it.
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Anyway, continuing on, yeah, they can do that. That was a web for internet kiosk.
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Uh, on the 12th, we have free VSD 9.0 is released. It's the major, uh, new version of
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BSD operating system featuring a brand new system installer. Hmm. That sounds good.
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Uh, see, there's a couple of development releases, but we also have a BSD or PC BSD 9.0 is released,
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which is the one that's, uh, based for like your desktop.
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And that's all I see. Did I miss anything, you guys? No, I am done with a bit of all of it.
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All right. Yep. And, uh, uh, one thing, uh, one thing I'll mention, uh, and this day, uh, actually this day in history 10 years ago,
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I'm going to read the top 10 most popular Linux distributions. Uh, number 10 was Xandros.
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Number nine was lindos. Number eight. How many of mine even around anymore? So far, we've got one lindos.
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We became Lynn Spire. That's right. That's right. Uh, like chorus, like rose, like rose.
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Like rose. No, this was 10 years ago. Are they still around anymore?
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I don't think so. They may have morphed into it, uh, or merged into something else.
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It's L-Y-C-R-O-I-S. This one will be familiar, though. Yeah. L-Y-C-O-R-I-S. Correct.
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This one will be familiar. Slackware. Slackware. That was my favorite. Yes, Susa.
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I have never run Slackware. Well, the close-up come as I've run, uh, vector on some things and they're
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Slimeware-based. And, uh, okay. Number six was Susa. Number five, Sorcerer.
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Sorcerer. Yeah. They're, they're a, uh, they're from scratch type distribution. Are they? Okay.
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That was, now I was back in 2002. And number four, Debian. Well-known distribution. Debian rocks.
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Debian rocks. Uh, number three was Gentoo. Number two was Red Hot. Red Hot. Red-Ed.
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Like chorus. Red Hot. Yeah. Like chorus was last updated on Wednesday, the 27th of July,
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2011. So, all right. Okay. And the number one, Linux distribution, 10 years ago today was
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Mandrake. Oh, no. Okay. Mandribe. Mandribe. Mandribe. It might be done shortly,
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according to the news last week. Wow. Yeah, I can remember some of these. Yeah.
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Soccer was my first server. It was just because the guy that I worked with, he's like,
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you got to do Slackware. And it was my first, you know, Linux server that was running. And, uh,
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it was a file server and actually ran a web server and stuff from it. It was fun.
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But then once I found Debian, that's all I've ever had since. That was it. Yeah. Yeah.
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Debian on the server, baby. Yeah, I think the only server, uh, software I've installed was,
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uh, Ubuntu server. But, uh, I remember, um, uh, the, uh, lindows and slash lindspire and the whole
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click and run. Remember that click and run, which I think, uh, was just, well, at that point,
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I was pretty new to Linux. I thought it was so cool because you get all this free software and,
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wow, it was just, just cool. So anyway, all right. Well, that's, I just wanted to share that
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little bit with everybody today. Yeah. Well, let's go to this week, the top five,
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uh, number five we have for done to at 1433. Actually, it's tied with Debian in number six.
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They put it for some reason at 1433. Open suce is 1440. And it's on the way down. It is.
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For doors at number three with 1495. Ubuntu is at number two with 1873 hits. And,
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and in the number one spot, we got mint with that, got to love that minty goodness with,
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with as many pages as number two and number three combined, more pages than number two and number
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three combined. That's because your whole family keeps pressing buttons here at the store. Hey,
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I got two kids and a wife and they got a lot of free time.
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I wonder if that counts unique hits. I bet it doesn't. No, I'm sure it doesn't because I might
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be wasting the time. That's true. That's true. All right. So yeah, I was, I was really
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interested in looking at that Trinity, you know, because I mean, I, it's interesting to see it
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out there because there's so many people. I thought you were a genome guy all the way. Come on.
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Oh, and you know, you guys, remember last week when we were looking at the various
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distros of the week, I think we covered pair OS and I believe I made the statement or comment
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that I was going to go home and install that and just check it out. Yeah. Well, I got to tell you,
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I did, I did, I did install it on a virtual machine and maybe I should have put it on
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directly on my laptop, but I have to say it was a little disappointed in it. Some of the dialogue
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boxes, the titles were in French, but the text was in English, although I did, was kind of a little
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sever off there. So I was, I felt the, you know, able to, able to practice your high school friend,
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Sam. That's right. My name is Mary. Yeah, Jim, I feel Mary. But anyway, the only thing I can do in
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French is count to five because it's a sentence. Are you ready? Yes. The Undo, Toa, Cat, Sank.
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I have never heard of that. Okay, but I never forget how to count the five. But, but it was,
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it was fairly easy to install. It had a problem recognizing my, my monitor, my graphics and so it,
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it just installed just the standard, the standard one. So, but aside from that, I mean, it was,
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it was okay. You know, again, I, maybe I was just thinking it was going to be, you think the
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lack of some of that graphic stuff was maybe because it was a virtual machine or was I not paying
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attention? You said no, no, no, no, I didn't say that. And it's possible. It's possible that it was.
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So maybe I'll try it again. Yeah, just because I've heard that sometimes a virtual machine has a hard
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time with some of those effects. Yeah, I did. I noticed that I had to install some guest add-ins.
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Now, I'm using virtual box and I had to do that for, because what I was doing virtually, I was
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running two screens. And I got it to work and everything. And, and you guys know that I had to
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install that other operating system for this one program that I can't run in Linux. And, yeah,
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I got it. I got the screens working just fine. Do a monitor and do a monitor in a virtual box,
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yeah? So, yeah, I was pretty pleased to just had a tweak it around a little bit and look
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pretty good. So you were running that program in wine? Yeah, I did. I tried, I tried running, believe
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me, I tried running it in wine. And it just, what it is, is a charting program for financial
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instruments, stocks and bonds and commodities and that type of thing. And it, it just, I think some
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real time, yeah, or real time, yep, yep. And so, so it's just streaming, you know, streaming data.
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And I thought I had it installed and then it wouldn't, the program wouldn't boot or it was
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just something I just couldn't get it to go. And so I ended up having to, having to run it in
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a Windows virtual environment. Is it a popular program? Is it something that's used by a lot of
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people? Well, it's zero charts. I have no idea with that. Yeah. And, you know, it's a charting
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package. So if you follow the markets, like I do. But is it popular? Like go a lot of day traders
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use it and things like that? Yeah. Well, I wouldn't say a lot do. I mean, I think there's probably,
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there's probably a fair number that do. But. Well, did you ever think about contacting the crossover
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people? You know, no, I haven't actually. But what I used before I went to this particular one
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was think or swim. And their platform, I believe it uses quite a bit of Java. And I am able to run
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at Linux. So that was nice. I mean, it has some limitations. But it worked fine. And then I
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like to see your charts because it's got much more flexibility. But the downside, of course, is
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I can't run it. You have to run it in that Redmond distribution. Yes, that other one.
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Haven't you tried seamless mode with virtual box? Seemless mode. What it is, it takes, like,
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I must not have if I asked that question. You can run, like you crank up your your windows virtual
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machine. And then you hit like control. Oh, I think it is. And it actually drops your back,
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your desktop off. But it leaves your individual windows up and puts the start bar at the bottom. So
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you're I can go back and forth without you can drag in between windows. And it's, it's awesome.
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You know, I think I did and I didn't even realize it because I noticed that I first of all
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presented me with some little dialog box. If I wanted to continue doing this thing kind of,
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oh, I can I'm moving the same back and forth and kind of go into the virtual box and out.
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I think you got that that made yeah, that made me how I got the dual monitor running too.
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Yeah, it's blind lock, you know, I do that all the time for dumb luck. You know, I first heard
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that heard about that in parallels or whatever replaced parallels. My friend was telling me about
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he did on his Mac. And like, I've got to be able to do it in my machine. And I found it. Yeah,
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it's really cool. Yeah. And I think it was those I want to say it was those guest add-ins that I
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had to install that really helped make that happen. Yeah, it's because of the video driver. Yeah.
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But the only downside is I do not get the the 1900 by 16 whatever our result native resolution
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that these widescreen monitors that I use have. So it's it's smaller. It's less. But I'll deal with
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that. It's not so bad. It looks like a big clown desktop. Is it? No, not quite. I said, yeah,
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there was 800 there's an 800 by 600 option that I managed to tweak it up a little higher than that.
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I have I have a little story about that. I was at a teacher's desktop. It has to be three weeks ago.
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I was doing some work on the machine. And he was standing over my shoulder and I'm like,
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Tim, why do you have this set to clown mode? He's like, clown mode. What are you talking about?
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I'm like, man, don't you notice that all these icons are so big and everything looks just all clown-ish.
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And he goes, you can change that.
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I changed it to 1200 by no, like 1600 by 1200 for me. He's like, that's great. That's great.
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You probably had the colored up down to like 16 years ago. No, it was on 24. But but
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it was just you can change that. And you made his day. I did. All right.
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That's a good story. Yeah. Well, it's like that IT guy song. Have you ever heard that IT guy song?
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No, I can never remember that. I can only ever remember the one line. Come with music?
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It does. But are you going to sing? No, I'm not. Okay. Maybe the one line. But in the one line
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that I can remember from it, it's like sometimes he comes to your desk and he's there all day.
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Other times he walks up and hits caps lock and walks away.
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All right. All right. It's on to the tech news. All right. Okay. In the tech news this week.
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First, we have Microsoft now collects extortion on approximately 70% of all US sales
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bandroids. LG is the latest victim to pay Microsoft's extortion demands. They are the eleventh
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victim in this extortion scheme. A list extortion is my word, by the way. None of the sources I
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used to write this use the word extortion. So this is. It's an editorial. Okay. Okay.
|
|
They're the eleventh victim of this extortion scheme. A list of the other victims includes
|
|
Samsung HTC and Acer. This leaves Motorola mobility as the only major manufacturer not to sign
|
|
an extortion agreement with Microsoft. I'd wager that Microsoft does not even approach Motorola
|
|
as Google now owns Motorola and those pockets are deep enough to scare the Microsoft patent
|
|
trolls. Microsoft now claims that they're collecting royalties on over seven royalties by the way
|
|
in air quotes. On over 70% of all Android smartphones sold in the US. The terms of this latest
|
|
agreement are unknown as Microsoft makes part of the agreement that the parties cannot make public
|
|
the patents covered by the Microsoft claims. In other words, a typically extortion agreement.
|
|
Yeah. So that that's just incredible. I don't know how they get away with it.
|
|
Did you tell me or did I hear that they make more money from that than they do from the sale?
|
|
They make more money on the extortion of Android producers than they do from Windows Phone sales.
|
|
Yeah, because they make the same amount as what they were charged to put Windows Phone on it.
|
|
So if they have 70% of the market running Android that they're getting money off of and then
|
|
5% that they're getting money off, they're making 70% of their money coming in from mobile is because
|
|
of these agreements. Evil. They are. They're just makes me glad. Well, I just got a new cell phone
|
|
and it's a Motorola Android so running Android I should say and I'm glad about that. So
|
|
and any more. Yes. Have a couple more. The MPAA instigates a dust up with ours
|
|
technical on one time. I like that site. I do too. On one 10, the MPAA, which stands for the
|
|
Motion Picture Association of America, said on its blog, ours technical, a tech blog with a
|
|
long history of challenging efforts to curb content theft. This entire claim by the MPAA appears
|
|
to be that appears to be based on the fact that ours technical opposes things in the past
|
|
like the broadcast flag, which would have allowed remote control of people's home entertainment
|
|
recording devices, along with their stand against DRM that prevents owners from ripping legal
|
|
backup copies of their DVDs. ours also has publicly opposed the horrendous SOPA legislation
|
|
currently in front of Congress. It is obvious that the MPAA's position is the wacky correlation
|
|
of fighting for consumers rights is the equivalent of having no enforcement at all.
|
|
Not only not that any representative of the MPAA would ever engage in outlandish statements
|
|
to further their cause like this quote from Jack Valenti when he appeared before Congress in 1982.
|
|
I say to you that the VCR is to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston
|
|
Strangler is to learn. That's pretty graphic. Does it get any better than that? I mean,
|
|
Jack Valenti obviously dead now and no longer. Head of the MPAA, but I think that as I recall,
|
|
I don't know if it's really true right now because the economy is a little shaky, but as I recall,
|
|
I think movie revenues increased after that. They did. I mean, who wants to see a movie on your
|
|
home screen? Well, of course, these days now with a 55-inch TV isn't going to be a little better,
|
|
but I still prefer large screens. I like to see that when I'm going to see my TV at home,
|
|
I don't watch much. Well, on one of the big screens we do with the Netflix watch some movies,
|
|
but the TV is for TV shows. I'm not really watching too many movies on it.
|
|
The United States migrates spy drone control panels from Windows to Linux.
|
|
Last September, the ground control systems for the Reaper drones, which reside at the
|
|
Creech Air Force Base in Nevada, became infected with a virus. When it happened, the Air Force dismissed
|
|
this intrusion as a nuisance that posed no real threat. It was, however, taken very seriously.
|
|
Still, the discovery of the virus on the Air Force's systems was a huge embarrassment.
|
|
This is what they had to say at the time. The malware in question is a credential
|
|
stealer, not a key logger, found routinely on computer networks, and is considered more of a
|
|
nuisance than an operational threat. It is not designed to transmit data or video,
|
|
nor is it designed to corrupt data, files, or programs on the infecting computer.
|
|
Our tools and processes detect this type of malware as soon as it appears on the system,
|
|
preventing further reach. They also went on to say the ground system is separate from the
|
|
flight control system Air Force pilots used to fly the aircraft remotely. The ability of the pilots
|
|
to safely fly these aircraft remains secure throughout the incident.
|
|
Screenshots of drone control computers posted by security researcher,
|
|
Miko Hyponin, and I'm sure I butchered your name and I'm sorry, show that some of the systems
|
|
have been migrated from Microsoft Windows to Linux. In a statement, Miko Hyponin said,
|
|
if I would need to select between Windows XP and a Linux-based system while building a
|
|
military system, I wouldn't doubt a second which one I would take.
|
|
So yeah, so they're running XP. They're not publicly going to say, yeah, they were,
|
|
because in the other screen, in other screenshots from other times, like pictures of the room and
|
|
things, you can see the Windows desktop, that Windows XP, green rolling hills, whatever.
|
|
So they're not publicly going to say what they're using ever, because it's the military,
|
|
and it's pretty critical stuff. But from his screenshots, you can obviously see that it's
|
|
no longer got a Windows. That's on some of these machines. They must be in the process of migrating
|
|
them over. Cool. And on my last story, we're back to secure boot, Microsoft locks out other OS
|
|
devices using UEFI. Early in December, the software Freedom Law Center warned the copyright
|
|
office that some operating system vendors would use UEFI secure boot, anti-competitively,
|
|
by colluding with hardware partners to exclude alternative operating systems.
|
|
Microsoft did not dilly-dally in revising their Windows hardware certification requirements
|
|
to prohibit other operating systems on ARM-based devices that have Windows 8 pre-installed.
|
|
The certification requirements define on page 116 a custom secure boot mode that allows for a
|
|
user present at the machine to add signatures for other operating systems to the system's
|
|
signature database. Except in the case of ARM devices, custom mode is prohibited. And I quote,
|
|
on an ARM system, it is forbidden to enable custom mode. Only standard mode may be enabled.
|
|
Oh, go ahead, me. Oh, I was just going to say now, ARM devices, they're more of the mobile
|
|
of the phone, yeah. And I'll get to that again. I'm going to be quiet. I'll let you keep going.
|
|
Also, you will not be allowed to disable secure boot. And again, I quote from the from the from
|
|
the specs, disabling secure boot must not be possible on ARM systems. So in other words,
|
|
if you purchase a machine with an ARM processor running win 8, it will never be able to boot anything
|
|
else. This also brings to light that surprise surprise Microsoft has been lying to us all along.
|
|
I personally am shocked that Microsoft would be less than truthful in its statements. Until recently,
|
|
this policy would have only affected Windows phone customers. However, Qualcomm announced that
|
|
they are going to manufacture Windows 8 tablets and ultrabook style laptops built on top of its
|
|
Snapdragon processors that are ARM based. Unless Microsoft has a policy change, these could
|
|
well be the first PCs ever that will only be able to run Windows. SFLC, which stands for the
|
|
software freedom law center, did predict in their comments to the copyright office. And I quote,
|
|
that misuse of UEFI secure boot would bring such restrictions already coming on smartphones
|
|
to PCs between Microsoft's new ARM secure boot policy and Qualcomm's announcement.
|
|
This worst case scenario is beginning to look inevitable. So yeah, so let's start it. And the
|
|
reason they're going to the reason I thought when I first started researching this was they were
|
|
doing it because of smartphones. So you could root your Windows smartphone based with an ARM
|
|
processor and then run Windows 8 phone and then put Android on it, some sandwich and mod or whatever.
|
|
You know what I mean? But it's not because of this Qualcomm thing. So they made this change and
|
|
then Qualcomm made the announcement. So there must have been some kind of backdoor deal going on
|
|
between Qualcomm and Microsoft. At least that's my opinion anyway. Sure.
|
|
Well, and take a look at how Apple has locked software to hardware and maybe what Microsoft's
|
|
trying to do is create that same environment themselves. Yeah, they're doing it differently.
|
|
Apple did it by by having good product solids off well and building and involved with the
|
|
manufacturing to get going. It wasn't that you couldn't use that software. It's just that it was
|
|
made specifically for Apple and Apple had the drivers and and that's what it was. You know what I mean?
|
|
But especially when Apple was back on the PPC. It's not so much anymore now that they're on
|
|
Intel stuff. But yeah. Well, you could do a boot back then with there was a separate program to
|
|
allow you to do a boot. But that's even that's gone away now. Like you said that's because it's
|
|
Intel. Anyway, they're Intel processing. Well, speaking of drivers, because you did say that
|
|
about two minutes ago, Matt. I was going to I was going to mention because I thought this was
|
|
so cool. In my household, we put a HP color laser jet that's a that will connect to the network
|
|
wirelessly, you know, the home network that I run and maintain. Anyway, so what was so beautiful
|
|
about it is that the Linux computers in the house, which are the majority of the computers in the
|
|
house, were able to easily connect to that printer and print to it. The other operating system
|
|
that I'm forced to use for a couple things, I had to go find drivers and I still haven't gotten
|
|
I think one of them, I'm just haven't even played too much with it. But I had to get drivers to
|
|
get to be able to print it with the other. So, you know, again, it's just I wanted to share that
|
|
because I just just makes me appreciate what I'm using Linux. Yeah. So you know, I've never really,
|
|
especially said it was an HP, right? Yeah. Well, I love HP anyway. Oh, because they're they're
|
|
compatibility with cups. I've never, ever had a had a HP printer that I couldn't run from cups.
|
|
Yeah. I agree. Yeah. I have seen similar situation at home where I got a wireless HP printer,
|
|
but it's ancient. But I just told my Ubuntu to look on the network. I found it and had the
|
|
drivers installed it. I didn't have to download anything. You mean you didn't go to local host
|
|
colon 631 and do it that way. They're wireless. Yeah, but no, that's the cups. Do it right now in
|
|
your own. Oh, no, no, no. Okay. Yeah. The cup is the cup interface. Yeah. I've gone Aaron. That's
|
|
the way I always do it. I never do a printer. Any other one. And then you could do it another way.
|
|
I tell you always go local host colon 631. Yeah. Right in, right even in Nome, they have a printer
|
|
management system and you can add in printers. And that's all I've been using for years. Maybe
|
|
it's in Mint 2. It might be, but I just do local host colon 631. It comes from Debian because I've
|
|
got up until I ran just straight Debian even on my laptop and dust tops and for a long time.
|
|
So yeah. All right. Well, and that's your news. That's it. That's all. That's all the news.
|
|
That's good information. That was good information. And I tell you, and you know, it's actually a great
|
|
segue because I think last week I promised that I would, and it'd be the point person to follow
|
|
the Barnes and Noble Microsoft lawsuit. And I went out and did some investigating,
|
|
subscribed to a couple of feeds. And unfortunately, as far as the lawsuit goes, I really don't have
|
|
anything more to report than what I did last week. However, there was an interesting bit of news
|
|
that Mr. Matt happened to forward to me because it involves Barnes and Noble. And I thought,
|
|
you know, I'm going to take this and share it with everybody. But what it involves is there's
|
|
apparently an ongoing kerfluffle. I had to use that word. And in some open source circles about
|
|
Barnes and Noble's release of the nook kernel source code, which is something that they're supposed
|
|
to do, of course, under the, and they have done. Yes, they have done. That's right. Under the
|
|
provisions of the, the GNU general public license, Adam Outler, who was commenting on the XDA
|
|
developers forum, XDA developers.com forums noted, it would seem that Barnes and Noble is betraying
|
|
the most sacred trust of things in the open source world, the general public license,
|
|
as open source programmers, we all use the GPL daily. The GPL is what keeps open source work
|
|
like the Linux kernel free, modifiable, and redistributable. I tried to compile the sources
|
|
provided by Barnes and Noble, but they are incomplete. They will not compile. I'm not the only one.
|
|
Others have tried and failed as well. You actually can compile them, but they won't install.
|
|
Yes, and I'm continuing there because then that's the thing I wanted to, I wanted to also mention
|
|
because really the issue is not, is not the code itself, but it's the signing key or the signature key.
|
|
The fact that Barnes and Noble did not supply that, and without that signing key, it's impossible
|
|
actually to compile a replacement kernel with the source code that they provided. Because the
|
|
hardware is locked down and won't boot a kernel unless that key is part of the... Exactly.
|
|
But it's not that you can't compile it. You can still compile a whole software.
|
|
So because of that, they said now the source code is useless, despite the fact it's probably
|
|
all there. It is all there except for the key. Just for the key. And so really the crux of the issue
|
|
apparently is whether that key is part of the source code. And I believe in the inversion two
|
|
of the GPL, which is what the kernel is still under. That's correct. Which is the correct version of
|
|
the GPL. Yeah, because Linus Torvalds does not like version three at all. It would because...
|
|
Which I think, I believe that they're trying to say at least that key fell under the
|
|
script's portion of it. Right. And that version three clarified the whole intent
|
|
of that portion of it. But that wasn't version two. And it's because version three, if the
|
|
Linus kernel were ever released under version three, it would practically kill the embedded Linus
|
|
market. And that's huge. And Linus sees the reality instead of the pie in the sky stuff.
|
|
And that's why it's never going to happen. Yeah. And that's actually what he said to
|
|
he and other high profile developers who've rejected version three have indicated that the
|
|
lockdown systems are permissible use of Linux, the Linux kernel, and are in full compliance with
|
|
the V, the version two license. Now, the important thing about that is that, well, at first of all,
|
|
carries a lot of weight because when you, if you go to court and you're presenting before a judge
|
|
and the author of the content is in favor of that particular position, then anybody who's trying
|
|
to go against it is going to have a very tough uphill battle on your hands. So anyway, I thought
|
|
that bit of news on the Barnes and Noble front was pretty interesting. I mean, how the Barnes
|
|
and Noble fans don't know. Yeah, so I love Barnes and Noble. And one of the reasons I love them
|
|
the most is because they're actually taking Microsoft on this. They're not, they're not, they're not
|
|
caving into their extortion and I'm good, good on you Barnes and Noble. Yeah, I like that.
|
|
And I'm buying, I'm going out to buy a nook. But I'm going because we had a demonstration
|
|
at MD log, not last month. Last month. Because this month's meeting was just today. Yeah, December.
|
|
Yes. Last month, December. It would be December. And that demonstration was a rooted nook. So
|
|
I know that that's, and I really like that. I liked the whole idea of that. And so I'm going to go
|
|
out and get one. And following the instructions from ours, Technica very closely and the XDA
|
|
developers forum, I'm going to give it a try. So I'll either have a nice brick or.
|
|
Well, you can't really totally brick it. Okay. What you've got to do is you've got to back up the
|
|
image first. Yeah. So the worst comes to where you can read all this talk image. Yeah. So
|
|
it sounds really cool. I want to see it when you get it done because I didn't make it to the
|
|
meeting to see the rooted nook. I'd like to see that. Yeah, I thought it was kind of cool.
|
|
It was very cool. Yeah. So anyway, but that's that's that's the Barnes and Noble news for this
|
|
this session. Oh, you know, I found a article that it was over on medgaget.com. And as it sounds,
|
|
it's a medical device. But really? It's a multiple disciplinary. Yeah, no.
|
|
Is that how you say no? Multiple disciplinary? No, I don't know. People from different disciplines.
|
|
There you go. It's a team of engineers I got together from the University of Washington and
|
|
the University of Santa Clara or Santa Cruz. Or I guess that's the University of California
|
|
in Santa Cruz. Yeah. They've developed a surgical robot. It's called the Raven 2.
|
|
And they're the Raven nevermore. They're going to build quite a few of these and send them out to
|
|
the different universities. It's a test. But what's really cool is it uses the open source robot
|
|
operating system so that anybody can program for or develop and program for this robot that
|
|
they're building for this to do surgery and stuff. It's pretty cool. But Tony, did you tell us
|
|
what that robot does? Is it surgical? It does. Yeah, that's it. Is it any particular specialty?
|
|
Or is it just a general practice? Well, I think that's what they're developing right now is whether
|
|
but what it has tiny little arm, very hands in there that can go in and cut and do whatever.
|
|
Okay, for those of you listening because this is a podcast and not a video cast,
|
|
Tony's rigging his his index and and middle finger and his thumb together.
|
|
All right, so anyway. And so this robot so it's at stand right next to the surgeon or is it
|
|
something that kind of comes down? Like is it a remote thing? Is it a picture? It's all in
|
|
development right now. There is a picture. And it shows it has it says it has some
|
|
med gadget that I don't so I'm not entirely sure what that means. Yeah, it's not go to
|
|
or you can go to it. It'll be in the show notes so anybody can go there at this point. Yeah,
|
|
I'm trying to go there now. Med Gadget.com and then open source surgery. I don't know what's
|
|
on the main page. But it shows it does show a picture of like these little it looks like there's
|
|
six hands coming in or actually just looks like little needles coming down that will do surgery on
|
|
you. And yeah, it's about halfway down the page. I don't know toward the bottom of the page. It
|
|
was posted on January 13th. But it looks like just this table with six, you know, like gigantic
|
|
needles coming in. Oh, that looks like some kind of medieval torture device. But I'm sure that
|
|
it's a wonderful thing for. Yeah, I thought it was really cool because the head uses the open source
|
|
robot. I don't know. I get distracted by all these other articles on the way there and I start
|
|
here we are. Open. Wow. Wow. Does not look like it. It does for the inquisition.
|
|
Yeah. No, seriously, though, it's pretty impressive. Yeah, but there's going to be so it says there's
|
|
seven units of this will be made so that researchers at Harvard, Johns Hopkins, University of Nebraska,
|
|
Lincoln, University of California, Berkeley, University of California, Los Angeles,
|
|
while remaining the two other systems at University of California, Santa Cruz and University
|
|
of Washington. So that looks really good. And then a lot of, there's, you wonder with robots how,
|
|
well, that can work. But if you think about it, if you remove the, well, they still, they do a lot
|
|
of robot surgery right now, like, and that's for remote situations where, like say you're out somewhere
|
|
in Fuji, Fuji, Alaska, and they have a clinic, right, that has one of these remote surgeons in it,
|
|
but no surgeon within a thousand miles. Oh yeah. Then the surgeon promotes into the machine and
|
|
does performs the surgery with the internet doesn't go down. Yeah, there you go. Where's a satellite
|
|
connection in your latency side? That could be a problem too. Actually, robots use a lot more now.
|
|
It's like around here, you see commercials for the cyber knife and things like that. And
|
|
so it's, it's really cool because you can do a lot more precise and you don't get the surgeon's
|
|
hands like Jake a little bit or whatever. So that's a good thing. Yeah, that would have
|
|
you a good thing. Right. Cut the wrong thing. I have a couple points of just general interest.
|
|
General interest. Yeah. Right. We're generally interested. January the 20th on Friday. That's
|
|
Penguin Awareness Day. It is. It is. Penguin Awareness Day. Yeah. While the actual like
|
|
National Penguin Day is in like April sometime, I think April 20th, but they thought
|
|
January would be a good time to have Penguin Awareness Day. Well, it's in the middle of winter
|
|
and penguins are. I think anybody should wear a tux on their low pin tux pin. Oh yeah. I am
|
|
not wearing a tuxedo. You have got the beans. Yeah. And you remind me also the raspberry pie that we
|
|
talked about a couple episodes ago. It's gone into production. It has, but did you see the betas?
|
|
They sold the betas out really fast to the, to developers. They were the only ones that were
|
|
allowed to buy them. And then did you see what they did with the last two? They put on eBay, didn't they?
|
|
They did. Yes. Yes. Well, Mary, you checked on the price. Yeah, what was?
|
|
I think it was as high as $2,700. Yeah, crazy. For a $35 or $25.
|
|
Devices. It's insane. Just for the cash. I'm saying, oh, I got the last beta.
|
|
But I think, I think one thing that was really good about that is beside the fact that the folks
|
|
at the Raspberry Pi Foundation got this money is that they took it. And I believe some of it went
|
|
to a charity or it went to a charity or something. I have no, or maybe they aren't charity.
|
|
But certainly some good work. And I'm looking forward to getting my hands on one of those
|
|
or several of them actually. For development. It's really good for them for development. They
|
|
get a little extra cash so they can make better products. Sure. Yeah, that's for sure.
|
|
And you know, CES is coming this week. It's already open. It's over now, I think. It's done.
|
|
I think that was just, I thought it was all week long. Yeah, probably. Yeah. And you know what,
|
|
released 30 years ago at CES? A Commodore. Commodore turns 30. That's right. You know what
|
|
released at the CES? What's that? A Buntu TV. I did see that. Oh, you know, I didn't see that.
|
|
It's a television that runs a Buntu. It looks really cool. You know, they have, right now in Unity,
|
|
how there's the different lenses or different things you can... When he says Unity, he means
|
|
the desktop that sucks. But it's like that for channels. You can just scroll through channels.
|
|
And I saw a video of how it works. It looks really cool. Just a little bit of an aside, though,
|
|
on that Unity thing. And I remember how I said that I did have it on a netbook. And so for the
|
|
amount of time I was using it on the netbook, it was okay. Well, my laptop did die. So I was using
|
|
that netbook fairly a lot this week, actually, just in the last couple of days. And the Unity interface
|
|
was so annoying that I actually installed LSD and switched over to LSD on that little netbook.
|
|
I just couldn't take it.
|
|
You know, I've seen it. I don't run it. But I've seen it. And it doesn't seem that bad to me.
|
|
I don't know why everyone just jumped on that band way. I hate it. Because you know why I hate it?
|
|
Because... Because everybody else does. No, because I'm old. And I like change. Yes.
|
|
And I like things to work the way they've always worked. And if it... My philosophy is if it works
|
|
and it's not broke, don't fix it. Don't make it Unity. Exactly. And I don't know. Maybe in the long run,
|
|
Ubuntu is doing the right thing and distinguishing themselves the way. Because when you look at Unity,
|
|
you know Ubuntu canicle. Just like when you see that Mac style. That's a Mac.
|
|
You know. But I thought that. And when I saw it, and again, this was a few months ago,
|
|
when it came out, they had... I don't know if they had some kind of acceleration with it or some 3D,
|
|
some aspect to it that I thought really made it look kind of flashy. Now again, it's from somebody
|
|
who doesn't run that footprint desktop. No, I'm just kidding. Just kidding. But anyway, I thought it...
|
|
I thought it looked not bad. I don't know. I am really, really liking Cinnamon. Though I gotta say
|
|
that those mint guys just... There's a couple of little niggling bugs in it that are kind of
|
|
annoying to me. Like in the taskbar at the bottom, one, you can't right-click the taskbar and tell
|
|
us to make any changes to it. I have yet to figure out how to customize that taskbar. But that's a
|
|
little annoying. Another thing is sometimes the menus that you get to pop up, like I use Remina a lot
|
|
for what I do, which is an RDP client for Linux. It lets me RDP into Windows machines. And that's
|
|
Remina. It's Remina, R-E-M-M-I-N-A. It's the absolute kick-ass best RDP client I have found for...
|
|
I'll have to check that out. So if you need to remote desktop into Windows clients,
|
|
it's rock solid. It works great. I use it every day. Anyway. But when you start Remina, it continues
|
|
to run even when you've closed it. It's got a little icon that stays down there in the system
|
|
tray. Sometimes I want to free up those resources so I want to close it. So I would right-click on it
|
|
and then the menu that pops up is behind the taskbar. And the closed buttons at the bottom.
|
|
But there is a little bit of sliver of it at the top that I could click on to close it.
|
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So I actually did switch back to mate until my laptop died. But I really like that sentiment.
|
|
They just have a couple of little bugs to work out. So that's cool.
|
|
Well, now I know sometimes you've got the ability to change a setting or something or shift something.
|
|
That just doesn't exist to allow you to do that.
|
|
Well, it's brand new. It's probably as a bug then.
|
|
Yeah, what the mint guys have done is they took Genome 3 and they replaced
|
|
put some cinnamon on it. Yeah, they did. They replaced the desktop shell part of Genome 3
|
|
with one that they custom wrote. That works in acts like Genome 2, 3, 2.
|
|
I like it a lot. Like I said, it was the first desktop environment that I ever had installed on
|
|
a machine where I could just by default hit the Windows key and start typing an application and
|
|
have it pop up. It's a super key. Yeah, and I almost became a Genome or a Genome person.
|
|
Yeah, I have no idea. Sometimes I say no, I'm just going to say no.
|
|
Well, I tell you what, it was a Genome 1.4 and I can remember I thought, oh, this is such a
|
|
cool looking desktop, but it kept crashing, I guess, way back. Maybe that was an
|
|
obviously an earlier version. And so I ended up going with KDE.
|
|
Well, way back in the day, I always liked KDE myself too, just because I liked it.
|
|
Well, your cursor doesn't have to go fly all over the screen for stuff. You stay down near the
|
|
bottom. Yeah. And I think the reason I liked it way back then too is because it,
|
|
and we're talking probably 10 years ago, it was much more, I hate to say, but Windows like,
|
|
because I'd come from a Windows environment when I first started running Linux.
|
|
And it was very Windows-like and very easy to learn how to do things in it because it worked
|
|
almost the same as the Windows environment I had been used to. But then when they went to that
|
|
KDE for, they just torqued me off and I have not been back since. You know, I think that's why
|
|
like, no, it's because it was so much away from Windows. I'm not against Windows, but
|
|
I need a separation so that I don't get confused between things. You know, it's like,
|
|
when things are so close to it, I'll always hit the same spot, but then I'm the wrong operating
|
|
system. So that's why I think why I wanted to go to GNOME because it had the menus at the top.
|
|
So I know that I'm not going to accidentally click on this and then hit the wrong thing, you know.
|
|
Well, I'll tell you, I occasionally will work on a Mac and I still,
|
|
that right-click, not having it. You do know if you use control click, if you use a right-click
|
|
mouse or something, right-click does work in the Mac operating system. No, it just used the touchpad.
|
|
Okay. But if you look up your wireless mouse to the Mac, it'll work. Actually, on the touchpad,
|
|
if you hold down two fingers and click, that's right-click. It'll bring up the menu for the right-click
|
|
menu. Oh, thank you very much. Wow, I learned something about a Mac. That's our Mac tip of the
|
|
of the year of the series. Oh, well, I'll try that out. Yeah. Well, I wanted to announce that
|
|
the MD-Lug meeting today, we had elections for officers and in the show right now, all three of us
|
|
are in the office. New officers. Yeah. Actually, Tony's not new. Tony was the secretary last year
|
|
and he was a secretary. Are esteemed secretary. Well, actually, we've all been on the officers at
|
|
one point. Correct. That's true. Mary's been the secretary in the past and I've been the secretary
|
|
in the past. And Mary's also a treasure in the past. Mary is returned to the treasure. And I have
|
|
taken on an unto for head role of president, so. All right. So should we change this to the
|
|
MD-Lug? I'll present your view. No. MD-Lug stands for Metro Detroit Linux users group, by the way.
|
|
Yeah. And you know, one other thing I was listening this week, I was keeping on listening to that
|
|
Haggar Public Radio New Year's broadcast. Yeah. And they finally really saw eight parts.
|
|
And in that last part, it was the after show. So it was apparently after New Year's.
|
|
And probably. They stopped the official recording, but one guy started recording his own from the
|
|
from the same stream. And his name's 5150. So he kept on, he went through his talking and then
|
|
Ken Fallon, he's the guy that pretty much runs HPR right now. And he had gone to sleep and he got
|
|
back up and then he got back on the show and they were still recording and running. And he gets on
|
|
in 5150. He's like, you know, Ken, I gotta tell you I got a problem with something here. You guys
|
|
released so much good stuff. I can't listen to it all. He's like, there's some of these good
|
|
new good podcasts out there that they're really good. Now I want to listen to them, but I don't have
|
|
time to listen to them all, but but one of them was those sunny morning guys. I'm like, yes,
|
|
they're talking about us. That's that's the plug for sunny morning
|
|
the Linux review of the year. Nobody else is ever going to mention us. It was cool.
|
|
That is nice. That is nice. Well, let's see what else we've got. What else has been happening in
|
|
the land of Linux? Linux and open source. That's the end of my stuff. And I got nothing else.
|
|
What about you, Mary? I don't have anything else right at the moment, but I'm
|
|
you know, actually, though, in Katie, there's a there's a little feature called activities.
|
|
And you know, it's part of that plasma desktop. It sounds really cool, but I don't know how
|
|
I would use it just because I'm not a power user like that. I saw I saw an article about that and I
|
|
started reading it because it's the title was misleading. And it was I thought it was activities
|
|
about Katie getting involved in these activities. What this is what I thought it was and I stopped
|
|
reading it. Tell us about it. Well, I'm not going to tell you much about it because I don't know
|
|
much about it, but all I wanted to say is that I'm going to do a little investigating of it because
|
|
I know that a couple of versions ago, I mean point versions ago, I don't think that was really
|
|
part of the landscape. At least I wasn't aware of it. So no, I've installed it and I've got these
|
|
larger icon or activity icons at the bottom. And you should check out. I can't remember whether
|
|
wash luck posted the notes for me, but there was a KDE presentation a couple months ago. And
|
|
he went over activities because they actually had a KDE dev. Yeah, I think that's who it was.
|
|
And he did a really good job. And activities looks really cool. It's similar to having multiple
|
|
desktops that you can scroll between, but each of those desktops are dedicated to a specific activity.
|
|
But I don't want to say more than that because I don't want to take away from your research and
|
|
and that's okay. That means I don't have to do as much research. Just kidding. Yeah, I mean,
|
|
they've got photos, photos activity. Right. So that's sort of like your editor and your viewer
|
|
all together. And I don't know. Well, it just sounds retarded to me. Well, the way he explained it
|
|
is that you have like your web surfing activity. And then you have your development activities.
|
|
And then you have your desktop publishing activities. See anything that would be helpful to me.
|
|
Oh, no, not for me, don't because I got my because I sort of think literally. Yeah,
|
|
when I am, because I'm like, when I'm preparing for the show, I have my web browser open,
|
|
I have, I have G edit open, and I have LibreOffice open. And I'm switching back between the three
|
|
and cutting and pasting and, and rewriting stuff. And then that's that's your editing activity.
|
|
But if you were, if you were doing something else, feel like Facebooking and Twittering and
|
|
yeah, all that. And I am, you know, that could be all on a separate activity.
|
|
Then from your research and you're, you're doing the show stuff.
|
|
And so what you'd have to do is rather than, rather than cycling through all those windows on
|
|
that desktop, you could have all that. Like, like, like, like, like, I don't want to say all tab is
|
|
such a hardship. Yeah. Because you're doing three or four open at the same time. Yeah, you have
|
|
three for your editing. And then you have three for your web browsing. Yeah, but they're not. And
|
|
you know what? Hey, I don't, that's a great idea, Tony. I open tabs. And then I, I can never
|
|
remember that the keyboard shirt got to do the tabs. But if I open them in different windows,
|
|
then I could just alt tab through all of it. Yeah. Oh, he's the same on a real genius,
|
|
not like your genius. Thank you. So anyway, but yeah, I thought those KDE activities and
|
|
that even make a good, well, I was thinking it'd make a good mini presentation. But since it's
|
|
already been done, a mini for the log. No, that was the last month. Yeah, if you want to,
|
|
that was wash log. I did it. And so we don't have that many people that come out to our meetings.
|
|
So you can do it today. The short presentation next month is from me. Oh, is it on SSHFS?
|
|
That should be good. But that's all I have for this week. Sweet. So I have.
|
|
You've been listening to the Sunday morning Linux review. This has been episode 14 for the week
|
|
of January 15, 2012. Featured music of the week. We have some, my outro music I found. That's it.
|
|
What is it? It's actually his name's Matthew Morris. And how do you know this guy, Tony?
|
|
He's my wife's cousin. I didn't check on his age. I should. But he's something like
|
|
19 or 20. He's pretty young. It is really good. I mean, I think it's his first,
|
|
his first original that he's written and recorded. But it's really cool. So take a listen.
|
|
I met a girl who came across my way. Her eyes were shiny as a bright sunny day.
|
|
She had a smile that made you want to keep her awhile. Oh yeah. We taught together just the two of us.
|
|
We'd rather walk instead of pay for the bus. We walked together. The stealing just keeps getting
|
|
so much better. Oh yeah.
|
|
She is running straight through my mind. I'm going to take my sweet time.
|
|
I'm pretty sure that it's great to see. I'll be so happy if you stay with me, love.
|
|
Baby, baby. I really hope that things will stay the same. I really hope that this will never change.
|
|
I really hope that this will never change.
|
|
Like I said, I'm going to stop right there, but it's a good bring around something for me then.
|
|
That's a nice way to do this.
|
|
And she is running straight through my mind
|
|
For her I'm gonna take my sweet time
|
|
Pretty sure that it's plain to see
|
|
I'll be so happy if you stay with me
|
|
Baby baby, I really hope that there's where we're still the same
|
|
I really hope that this will never change
|
|
I really hope that this will never change
|
|
I'm really glad you came across my way
|
|
I'm really glad you made me come across my home
|
|
I'm really glad you made me come across my home
|
|
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