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:
The guys discuss the news of the day and almost talk about routers.
While Mark is away, Chris and Seth turn the show over to the listeners for another Listener Feedback show!
Mark and Chris speak with Web designer Christy Eller regarding her views on women in Open Source and interesting young girls in technology in general.
With Mark absent once again, and schedule miscommunication leaving them without a guest, Seth and Chris just wing it!
The Gui Kid and the Command-line Godfather have the show all to themselves this week, but there's still plenty of rantng to go around.
The guys discuss the current state of Linux market share and have an interesting distinction regarding the difference between Linux and Gnu/Linux.
Our resident Fedora Ambassador gives us his impressions of the 10th-anniversary Fedora release.
After a thorough discussion of recent tech news, he guys have a look at the results of Linux Journal's online Reader's Choice poll.
This week Chris regales us with his experiences involving the Gnome 3-based version of Linux Mint 16. Hint: He HATES Gnome 3.
Instead of using the occasion of New Year's Day to look back on 2013, the guys decide to look back on the entire history of telecommunications.
When sickness and plumbing sideline the Command-line Godfather and the GUI Kid, Mark spends a few minutes reflecting on what Christmas means to him and shares a story from his past.
In the absence of a real topic, the guys have a look at the recent tech news, respond to listener feedback and just generally ramble about stuff.
Spurred by a couple of recent articles on the subject, the guys talk a bit about Net Neutrality and what it means to all of us.
In the absence of our Command-Line Godfather, Seth and Mark have a rambling discussion about how an Internet designed around the implicit trust of the 20th Century can adapt to the malware-filled 21st Century.
Once again, in our seventh installment of the Listener Feedback series, the guys turn the show over to the listeners and respond to their questions and comments (after plenty of talk about bacon first).