TuxJam 69 – Tuxy McJamface

Your creative, common, free and open hosts of Tuxjam, Kevie, Dave (aka thelovebug) and Andrew (aka mcnalu) return for another tour of software and tunes. We start, as always, with a glance down the latest releases on  distrowatch.

In an attempt to inject brevity into the show we tried only review two items this month:

But we managed instead to talk longer about fewer things with Dave doing an excellent Columbo impersonation with several “one more thing”s about KDE Neon.

KDE Neon desktop

The following CCmusic tracks were not harmed in the making of this episode:

We close the show with a brief roundup of feedback. Any that you may have is always welcome, email us direct should you have any advice, tips, questions or simply want to say hi.

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The Binary Times – Series 4 Episode 11

Series 4 Episode 11 – In this episode, Mark and Wayne are back from Freenode Live, all fired up for sortware freedom and privacy, we chat about some of the speakers we saw there, more about the Raspberry Pi TV Hat, more amazing under the hood tips and an Irish saying in this fortnights episode, have a listen…
00:24 Wayne welcomes us to Series 4, Episode 11. Bristol’s nice and calm, Kilkishen is nice and calm too. Mark comments on the armistice of WWI.
01:33 Wayne announces the fact that Wayne and Mark went to Freenode last weekend, as well as the fact that the Binary Times is at its 49th Episode!
Mark goes on to speak about Freenode and mentions some of the highlight talks for him. The first he mentions is Doc Searle’s and Simon Phipps’ fascinating discussion around privacy and free and open source software, followed by John Sullivan’s talk on free communications tools, Bradley Kuhn’s interactive chat and VM Brasseur’s closing keynote on four ways to spread the four freedoms. Wayne points out that all the talks are available at freenode.live. Mark wants people to take back their power and respect their freedom and privacy instead of putting up with their fur lined mousetraps, and governments need to protect the rights of their citizens. Wayne mentions Leah Rowes talk on Libreboot as a good talk.
25:10 Mark tells us in other news that he’s replaced his HDD with an SSD and that he’s been having some weird issues with the digital clock on his desktop panel.
29:35 Wayne tells us that he’s upgraded all his machines to Ubuntu MATE 18.04. He’s also upgraded a laptop of his with KDE Neon, though the experience with Discover left him cold (and he’s CPU pretty hot if the fans were anything to go by!) and he’s back on MATE. Mark tells us he’s updated his Ubuntu Studio to 18.10.
31:55 Wayne moves the talk onto the Raspberry Pi TV Hat, a device that both the guys purchased. The guys discuss their experience with it. Wayne used tutorials on the Pi-Hut to help him stream TV to different places around the house. He’s also streaming to his android devices using TVHGuide. To help set up kodi he installed kodipvrhts by typing sudo apt install kodi-pvr-hts on the command line. Wayne’s next project is to save the recorded video to his NAS. Mark wants to use his TVHat as a DVR.
40:48 Wayne goes on to tell us that he installed Raspbian Stretch Lite on one of his Raspberry Pi Zero and his network wouldn’t work. He found the problem was a typo. It was a tricky one to troubleshoot.
45:26 Under the Hood – Wayne’s under the hood is a great one – df -h |grep /dev/sd. Mark adds to that by saying you could type df -h |grep -v loop to achieve the same thing.Wayne mentions YADM as a good dot file manager.
Mark’s under the hood was going to be around Freenode and IRC and IRC clients, like Quassel and Konversation and IRSSI, hexchat and smuxi. The guys are thinking about having a IRC presence for the 50th episode of the Binary Times.
52:05 Irish saying of the podcast: “Suas Síos” or Up and Down. We hope you enjoyed the podcast as much as we did making it!

The Binary Times – Series 4 Episode 10

Series 4 Episode 10 – In this episode, Mark chats about his experiences with Elementary OS, he also speaks about the Kilkishen coding club which has had its second class, Wayne speaks about installing OSTicket, the new Raspberry Pi TV hat, Sonoj Festival, Ubuntu Server 18.04 quirks, more amazing under the hood tips and an Irish saying in this fortnights episode, have a listen…
00:24 Wayne welcomes us to Series 4 Episode 10 of the Binary Times. Bristol is bright and sunny, and Mark isn’t sure what time zone he’s in any more. At least the day is a good day to be alive in.
01:16 Wayne asks Mark what he’s been up to for the last two weeks, and Mark tells us. First he tells us that he’s sporting his new sweatshirt from Gabor and co at Hello Tux and loving it. He goes on to tell us that he has installed Elementary OS and he’s really impressed (the release notes for Elementary OS 5 Juno can be found here). Mark notes the Libre Office suite isn’t installed by default so the first thing he does is install it. Mark calls out Elementary’s coding editor and the file manager for special mention. He goes on to say that after first impressions he would even consider using it on laptops and for the Coding Club. Mark then talks a bit further about the Coding Club.
09:12 Mark asks Wayne what he’s been at. Wayne tells us he’s been going bonkers with Linux the last two weeks he’s been doing so many things. He first mentions the second annual Sonoj Convention that’s on right now. What he really likes is the fact that it can be streamed live and downloaded later.
12:49 The next thing Wayne chats about is the Raspberry Pi TV hat. This opens all kinds of opportunities for working with TV streams. Mark tells us that he recently got a POE hat but is unsure of its utility, while Wayne mentions that you can get a GPIO extender. Wayne lets us know that there are tutorials available already for the Raspberry Pi TV hat.
17:35 Wayne and Mook talk about the Ubuntu user statistics.

22:58 Wayne tells us a bit of a convulted story about KVMs, 16.04, 18.04 and OS-Ticket. Please find the following as notes to get osticket working on Ubuntu 18.04:
OSTicket setup on 18.04
The php packages require the universe repositories, this can be enabled (know this is the universal repository and not maintained by Canonical)thus:
sudo add-apt-repository universe
You can get OSTicket from github
You can get Mariadb 10.3 from here.
You need to link the osticket.conf to nginx’s default site using this command:
sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/conf.d/osticket.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default.
A fix for the ‘Valid CRSF toke issue’ can be found here.
A fix for the ajax white box issue can be found here.
Untested WHITE BOX issue fixes can be found here, here and here.
27:04 Wayne tried to get Office 365 working with Thunderbird without success. Speaking of failures, Mark mentions that he recently upgraded his Ubuntu Touch phone but the upgrade has left his phone fairly unresponsive and unusable unfortunately. Wayne brings the chat back to OSTicket and why he wants to use it and mentions Zim as an alternative. The guys talk about using OSTicket, documentation and retirement.
33:47 Wayne tells us he bravely did a do-release upgrade to his 16.04 box over SSH and the guys discuss all the new changes to 18.04.
39:20 Under The Hood – Mark tells us that there are GUI frontends for systemd. These include systemdgenie, systemd-kcm (superceded by systemdgenie), systemd system manager and systemd manager, as well as cockpit. Mark found this out with the help of Linux Magazine!
Wayne’s first under the hood is a vim tip – Switching case of characters – Press “~” – if you keep pressing “~” it will switch case one character at a time. See this article for more. He goes on to say using the “.” repeats commands. Wayne goes on to tell us to create a simple webpage for the current working directory over port 8000, use this command:
Python -m SimpleHTTPServer

Robert wrote in to inform us that this module seems to come standard in any installation of Python 2 but something to be aware of is that in many distros, the "python" command is symlinked to Python 3. Since Python 3 doesn't include this module in its standard library, you need to run "python2 -m SimpleHTTPServer" to use it.
46:06 Irish saying of the podcast - "Faigh do chóta agus cuir ort é" Get your coat and put it on!

The Binary Times – Series 4 Episode 9

Series 4 Episode 9 – In this episode, Mark chats about issues he is having with SimpleScan, Wayne talks more about Linux audio, upgrades to Nextcloud 14.0.3, cat5e cable lengths, Humble Bundle offerings, new sweatshirts, more amazing under the hood tips and an Irish saying in this fortnights episode, have a listen…
00:25 Wayne welcomes us to Series 4 Episode 9 on this, the 13th October, 2018. It’s beautiful, windy and cool in Bristol, and Mark tells us that he survived Storm Callum to tell the tale. Mark tells us that Extreme Weather can Extreme off for itself.
02:10 Wayne asks Mark what he’s been up to and Mark tells us. Paper work has a tendency to boggle Mark’s mind. Aside from that, Mark tells us to watch Mr.Robot Series 3. He also relates a cautionary tale regarding his use of simple-scan and not understanding the process that goes into scanning large amounts of documents. Mark tells us to festina lente, or hasten slowly.
10:43 Mark asks Wayne what he’s been up to. Wayne tells us that he’s continuing with his journey’s through Linux audio; he’s been using and donated to the zyn-fusion application, continuing to enjoy using the <ahref=”https://kxstudio.linuxaudio.org/Applications:Carla”>Carla plugin and he’s been in contact with Unfa about an Ardour beginner’s course, and Unfa is waiting for Ardour 6. Wayne is interested to see what Ardour 6 will be like. He goes on to say that he has upgraded to Nextcloud 14.0.3 and so far so good, he’s happy with it, Nextcloud talk doesn’t rev up his fans as much, it’s bigger better faster stronger to paraphrase Daft Punk. Wayne is also impressed with the Nextcloud Security Scan checker. Mark and Wayne think that these features are important in staying secure.The guys agree that it’s important to reach for an A+.
20:55 This leads the guys to talk about network cables, minimum lengths of network cables, and spark gap erosion proof connections (IEC-60512-99-001 standard).
27:42 This leads the conversation onto the benefits of WiFi6.
32:10 Wayne brings the conversation around to the Head First Humble Bundle. Mark got the bundle and discusses his first impressions. Both Wayne and Mark think this head first style of learning may be a good thing. If you’re interested there’s only two days left, so get it now! Wayne and Mark go onto discuss the Make Electronics 2018 bundle. Both of them are unsure if they will get this bundle though. Mark mentions there is a FabLab in Limerick.
40:22 Wayne tells us about the new sweatshirts available from Hello Tux. Mark tells us he’s going to be wearing his Binary Times gear when they go to Freenode in a few weeks.
42:50 Wayne mentions a beginners guide to JACK that he found at the Libre Music Production website that’s worth a look for anyone interested in learning more about JACK.
43:50 Under the Hood. Mark’s Under the Hood is sudo apt remove [package-name] and sudo apt purge [package-name] to remove an application while leaving configuration files intact and to remove an application and all its associated files, respectively.
Wayne’s under the hood is about the memory split on the raspberry pi.
To access the memory split functionality, from the console type
raspi-config -> Advanced -> Memory Split

47:53 Irish saying of the podcast: “Cad atá tú a déanamh idir na fiacla” or What are you making between the teeth!
We hope you enjoy the podcast as much as we did making it!

TuxJam 68 – Penetrative Testing Disco

Andrew, Dave and Kevie return after a bit of a delay having fought off a number of viruses kindly donated to them by their children. We hope you enjoy our 68th offering of free and open source software and creative commons software.

 

After the usual distrowatch roundup with our quick impressions of recent linux distribution releases, we take a deeper look at the highly polished linux distribution from China, Deepin linux 15.7.

And an apology follows, because in TuxJam 60 (Thrusty spaceships) the show notes claimed we reviewed the game Alite, a re-creation of the classic game Elite on Android, but we did not. This was politely pointed out to us by its developer Philipp Bouillon. Sorry Phillip! We hope we have now righted that wrong by reviewing it in this episode.

Also reviewed is the interesting but quirky FOSS Browser on Android.

Finally, in the feedback section we briefly discuss the review of TuxJam by the LinuxLinks website and how we compare, in their opinion, to other Linux podcasts. We round of the show recalling our fond memories of this year’s Podcrawl Glasgow and also Oggcamp 2018 which was held in Sheffield.

CC Music tracks:

Your feedback is always welcome, email us direct should you have any advice, tips, questions or simply want to say hi.

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The Binary Times – Series 4 Episode 8

Series 4 Episode 8 – In this episode, we both speak about our attitudes to DRM, software as a service, Wayne does more digging around with Linux audio (especially Carla), more amazing under the hood tips and an Irish saying in this fortnights episode, have a listen…
00:24 Wayne Welcomes us to Season 4 Episode 8 from a sunny Bristol. Mark tells us that the fog is lifting and the skies are blue and all is calm in Kilkishen. Another Amazing Day for podcasting. The weather gets the guys talking about what activities are good to do in certain weather and how all this is related to Linux.
04:08 Wayne asks Mark what he’s been up to for the last two weeks. Mark tells us he’s been busy, and then goes on to talk about the International Day against DRM and what happened around the world for IDAD. The guys have a discussion around DRM which also takes in IoT devices, what people take stands on and the use and acceptance of proprietary software.
17:27 Mark brings the topic of conversation around to the LibreOffice Conference 2018 held in Tirana, Albania, from September the 25th – 28th. Mark talks about the programme and in particular the advantages Open Document Formats, Open Source and Open Standards.
20:29 Mark asks Wayne what he’s been up to, and it turns out that he’s been working on audio on Linux. Wayne tells us that he uses Ubuntu MATE 16.04 with the KXStudio plugins, in particular Cadence and Carla and goes on to tell us about the advantages of using these. Wayne goes on to tell us that he did come across the Sonoj Festival in Cologne in his search for documentation and they have created some great video tutorials (on audio!)
29:47 Mark asks Wayne if he has come across any good documentation for networking and systemd and goes on to ask the listeners if they have any advice on good documentation. He also asks the audience if they have any ideas on replacing feedburner.
33:33 Under the Hood: Wayne starts off with a tip on Thunderbird email client and that is to compact your folders on a regular basis.
Mark follows on from this to chat about what the Mozilla foundation is doing under the hood. Mark also asks if any of the audience has any links they could point him at in order to better help him know what is going on in terms of open IoT and SCADA. The lads discuss IoT. Wayne is ok with sitting in the dark if it means not using a cloud app, Mark gets all huggy and wants to embrace IoT. They finish off the conversation with more chat about how wonderful Nextcloud is.
48:03 Irish saying of the podcast “Gheobhaidh mé bosca nua sópa” or I will get a new box of soap. The guys thank their listeners, and we hope you enjoy it as much as they do making it.

The Binary Times – Series 4 Episode 7

Series 4 Episode 7 – In this episode, Mark has been having trouble with his Pi-hole, a series of troublesome IT times in his office, Wayne has been upgrading routers, we speak about language and chickens, Matomo – the website analytical software, the EU copyright directive , more amazing under the hood tips and an Irish saying in this fortnights episode, have a listen…
00:24 Wayne welcomes us to Series 4, Episode 7 from a sunny, autumnal Bristol. He’s enjoying the weather, it’s good chicken weather! Mark greets us from an overcast, but calm Kilkishen. He fears that next week might be quite bad weather wise, watch this space, maybe retrospectively…
01:44 With the weather out of the way, Wayne asks Mark what he’s been up to in his Little Linux Land for the last fortnight. Mark tells us that he upgraded his pihole to version 4 and after adding some extra blocklists saw his blocked traffic go from ~3% to ~44%, which he puts down to snapchat. He goes on to tell us that both his pi-hole and his main desktop PC both stopped working last night, the reason for which he hasn’t figured out yet. Wayne reminds us that we’re talking about all good things about Linux. Mark blames nVidia for its sucky stupid proprietary drivers. This leads the guys to have a bit of a ‘production meeting’ mid podcast to discuss the advantages of being Irish and [ab]using the English language. All feedback on this production meeting welcome!

07:50 Wayne tells us that he has updated dd-wrt on all his routers. The flirtation with Microtik’s RouterOS is over after Ben, one of our contirbutor’s, mentioned an article focusing on MikroTik router vulnerabilities. Wayne thanks the DD-WRT community for all their hard work over the years. Wayne checks some info to ensure his reporting accuracy, and the lads joke about their recent efforts to improve the podcast.

10:41 Wayne tells us he also updated his Nextcloud instance. This leads to a discussion around how good Nextcloud is and also the new features available in Nextcloud 14.

16:40 Wayne tells us of the fun he’s had updating his servers to Ubuntu 18.04. Luckily he was prudent, he snapshotted his previous 16.04 server, and all is good. The guys discuss good sys admin practices, dabbling, and some meat and potatoes for good measure. Apologies to all the vegetarians out there!

19:12 Moving on from that, Wayne tells us that he upgraded his desktop to Ubuntu MATE 18.04. Wayne tells us he is using Lenovo’s Display Link and that Adnan Hodzic’s display link driver for Debian has proved immeasurably useful, thanks Adnan!

21:10 Wayne brings the conversation around to the latest Humble Bundles, ranging from UI/UX to Trivia to Smart homes / smart cities. The guys chat about a number of topics ranged around the ideas in these bundles.

29:50 In other stuff that Wayne has been doing, he’s discovered that Piwik has become Matomo. This leads to more conversation around privacy and more production meeting type discussions! Mark mentions the Miro Guide as another way to promote the podcast. Mark refers back to Squid’s point of providing information about open source technologies on proprietary platforms as a valid way to spread the free software message. It’s a tough one to crack. Welcome to lucky bag podcasting! The guys invite everyone listening to join in on providing their views.

35:50 Wayne talks Audio on Linux, specifically JACK, and some brilliant tutorials that he has come across explaining how to use JACK.

38:02 Mark follows up on the current state of the EU copyright Directive by telling us that the EU Parliament voted to adopt its position on digital copyright rules. Mark follows this with his own take on all this malarky, and the guys have a discussion around this.

43:05 Mark follows on from all this with a mention of the International Day against DRM Mark also mentions the Defective by Design’s DRM free guide to living.

47:00 Under the Hood – Mark’s Under the Hood is a quick one on how to do networking right on a Raspberry Pi and that is edit dhcpcd.conf and nothing else.

Wayne’s Under the Hood is to use the webpagetest.org website to test web page loading times.

48:25 Irish Saying of the Podcast – “Faoi mhóid bheith saor” – Sworn to be Free (ahem, apart from all the proprietary stuff, sorry!)

We hope you enjoyed the podcast as much as we did making it!