Everyday Linux
Summary: Perhaps the only Linux show on the Internet that isn't about Linux- Everyday Linux is about life in the context of Linux. News, commentary, humor, and of course bacon await you in this rambling wreck of a show... but if you're not careful, you may accidentally learn something along the way.
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- Artist: Chris Neves, Seth Anderson, & Mark Cockrell
- Copyright: Everyday Linux by Element Opie Productions is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Podcasts:
Mark and Seth have a discussion about balancing the need for personal privacy and the benefits of public sharing. No matter where you stand on the issue, there's sure to be something in this episode to have you raving at your podcast player.
We're back after a month off and we make up for lost time catching up on recent tech news.
Has technology failed to live up to its promise? Is the Internet a failed experiment in unlimited freedom? Will we all be better off once Skynet takes over?
SourceForge continues it's path toward the Dark Side, Amazon continues to be unabashedly ambitious, and Mark goes unnecessarily insane over a bunch of cry-babies over at Reddit.
PayPal is up to no good, SourceForge is turning evil, computers are better scientist that humans... oh, and the Internet says Mark is wrong!
What constitutes Malware? Who gets to write the definition? What role does consent play in what's right and what's wrong? Why won't Stallman shut up?
Seth settles into his old routine and brings us a bevy tech news to review, discuss, and rant about.
Mark interviews our very own GUI Kid as we take some time to learn more about our good friend Seth.
Mark and Chris have a little fun with some unusual trivia covering technology, history, science and more.
This week Chris takes center stage as Mark interviews our very own Command-link Godfather to find out what makes him tick.
Malware abounds, Debian's got some new tricks, Ubuntu gets their vervet on, and millenials complain about things they don't like.
What's the real price of our "cheap" gadgets? Do we have a moral responsibility to keep that old phone a few months longer?
Patent trolls lose in court, Google loses at it's own game, Ubuntu offers a phone no one wants, and of course Mark finds a reason to rant.
While Chris is away celebrating his mother's birthday, Seth and Mark offer their unique commentary on the tech news of the week.
Chris gives us his take on the Fedora-derived Korora distribution.