Hangout – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:47:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Hangout – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Devious Methods | BSD Now 42 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/60302/devious-methods-bsd-now-42/ Thu, 19 Jun 2014 11:56:15 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=60302 Coming up this week, we’ll be showing you how to chain SSH connections, as well as some cool tricks you can do with it. Going along with that theme, we also have an interview with Bryce Chidester about running a BSD-based shell provider. News, emails and cowsay turkeys, on BSD Now – the place to […]

The post Devious Methods | BSD Now 42 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Coming up this week, we’ll be showing you how to chain SSH connections, as well as some cool tricks you can do with it. Going along with that theme, we also have an interview with Bryce Chidester about running a BSD-based shell provider. News, emails and cowsay turkeys, on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


iXsystems


Tarsnap

Direct Download:

Video | HD Video | MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | HD Vid Feed | HD Torrent Feed

– Show Notes: –

Headlines

PIE and ASLR in FreeBSD update

  • A status update for Shawn Webb’s ASLR and PIE work for FreeBSD
  • One major part of the code, position-independent executable support, has finally been merged into the -CURRENT tree
  • “FreeBSD has supported loading PIEs for a while now, but the applications in base weren’t compiled as PIEs. Given that ASLR is useless without PIE, getting base compiled with PIE support is a mandatory first step in proper ASLR support”
  • If you’re running -CURRENT, just add “WITH_PIE=1” to your /etc/src.conf and /etc/make.conf
  • The next step is working on the ASLR coding style and getting more developers to look through it
  • Shawn will also be at EuroBSDCon (in September) giving an updated version of his BSDCan talk about ASLR

Misc. pfSense news

  • Couple of pfSense news items this week, including some hardware news
  • Someone’s gotta test the pfSense hardware devices before they’re sold, which involves powering them all on at least once
  • To make that process faster, they’re building a controllable power board (and include some cool pics)
  • There will be more info on that device a bit later on
  • On Friday, June 27th, there will be another video session (for paying customers only…) about virtualized firewalls
  • pfSense University, a new paid training course, was also announced
  • A single two-day class costs $2000, ouch

ZFS stripe width

  • A new blog post from Matt Ahrens about ZFS stripe width
  • “The popularity of OpenZFS has spawned a great community of users, sysadmins, architects and developers, contributing a wealth of advice, tips and tricks, and rules of thumb on how to configure ZFS. In general, this is a great aspect of the ZFS community, but I’d like to take the opportunity to address one piece of misinformed advice”
  • Matt goes through different situations where you would set up your zpool differently, each with their own advantages and disadvantages
  • He covers best performance on random IOPS, best reliability, and best space efficiency use cases
  • It includes a lot of detail on each one, including graphs, and addresses some misconceptions about different RAID-Z levels’ overhead factor

FreeBSD 9.3-BETA3 released

  • The third BETA in the 9.3 release cycle is out, we’re slowly getting closer to the release
  • This is expected to be the final BETA, next will come the RCs
  • There have mostly just been small bug fixes since BETA2, but OpenSSL was also updated and the arc4random code was updated to match what’s in -CURRENT (but still isn’t using ChaCha20)
  • The FreeBSD foundation has a blog post about it too
  • There’s a list of changes between 9.2 and 9.3 as well, but we’ll be sure to cover it when the -RELEASE hits

Interview – Bryce Chidester – brycec@devio.us / @brycied00d

Running a BSD shell provider


Tutorial

Chaining SSH connections


News Roundup

My FreeBSD adventure

  • A Slackware user from the “linux questions” forum decides to try out BSD, and documents his initial impressions and findings
  • After ruling out PCBSD due to the demanding hardware requirements and NetBSD due to “politics” (whatever that means, his words) he decides to start off with FreeBSD 10, but also mentions trying OpenBSD later on
  • In his forum post, he covers the documentation (and how easy it makes it for a switcher), dual booting, packages vs ports, network configuration and some other little things
  • So far, he seems to really enjoy BSD and thinks that it makes a lot of sense compared to Linux
  • Might be an interesting, ongoing series we can follow up on later

Even more BSDCan trip reports

  • BSDCan may be over until next year, but trip reports are still pouring in
  • This time we have a summary from Li-Wen Hsu, who was paid for by the FreeBSD foundation
  • He’s part of the “Jenkins CI for FreeBSD” group and went to BSDCan mostly for that
  • Nice long post about all of his experiences at the event, definitely worth a read
  • He even talks about… the food

FreeBSD disk partitioning

  • For his latest book series on FreeBSD’s GEOM system, MWL asked the hackers mailing list for some clarification
  • This erupted into a very long discussion about fdisk vs gnop vs gpart
  • So you don’t have to read the tons of mailing list posts, he’s summarized the findings in a blog post
  • It covers MBR vs GPT, disk sector sizes and how to handle all of them with which tools

BSD Router Project version 1.51

  • A new version of the BSD Router Project has been released, 1.51
  • It’s now based on FreeBSD 10-STABLE instead of 10.0-RELEASE
  • Includes lots of bugfixes and small updates, as well as some patches from pfSense and elsewhere
  • Check the sourceforge page for the complete list of changes
  • The minimum disk size requirement has increased to 512MB

Feedback/Questions


  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • A special thanks to our viewer Lars for writing most of today’s tutorial and sending it in
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • If you want to come on for an interview or have a tutorial you’d like to see, let us know
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (18:00 UTC)

The post Devious Methods | BSD Now 42 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
A Sixth pfSense | BSD 25 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/52032/a-sixth-pfsense-bsd-25/ Thu, 20 Feb 2014 21:25:32 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=52032 We sit down for an interview with Chris Buechler, from the pfSense project, to learn just how easy it can be to deploy a BSD firewall. Plus our walkthrough.

The post A Sixth pfSense | BSD 25 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

We sit down for an interview with Chris Buechler, from the pfSense project, to learn just how easy it can be to deploy a BSD firewall. We\’ll also be showing you a walkthrough of the pfSense interface so you can get an idea of just how convenient and powerful it is. Answers to your questions and the latest headlines, here on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


\"iXsystems\"

Direct Download:

Video | HD Video | MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | HD Vid Feed | HD Torrent Feed

– Show Notes: –

Headlines

EuroBSDCon and AsiaBSDCon

  • This year, EuroBSDCon will be in September in Sofia, Bulgaria
  • They\’ve got a call for papers up now, so everyone can submit the talks they want to present
  • There will also be a tutorial section of the conference
  • AsiaBSDCon will be next month, in March!
  • All the info about the registration, tutorials, hotels, timetable and location have been posted
  • Check the link for all the details on the talks – if you plan on going to Tokyo next month, hang out with Allan and Kris and lots of BSD developers!

FreeBSD 10 on Ubiquiti EdgeRouter Lite

  • The Ubiquiti EdgeRouter Lite is a router that costs less than $100 and has a MIPS CPU
  • This article goes through the process of installing and configuring FreeBSD on it to use as a home router
  • Lots of good pictures of the hardware and specific details needed to get you set up
  • It also includes the scripts to create your own images if you don\’t want to use the ones rolled by someone else
  • For such a cheap price, might be a really fun weekend project to replace your shitty consumer router
  • Of course if you\’re more of an OpenBSD guy, you can always see our tutorial for that too

Signed pkgsrc package guide

  • We got a request on IRC for more pkgsrc stuff on the show, and a listener provided a nice write-up
  • It shows you how to set up signed packages with pkgsrc, which works on quite a few OSes (not just NetBSD)
  • He goes through the process of signing packages with a public key and how to verify the packages when you install them
  • The author also happens to be an EdgeBSD developer

Big batch of OpenBSD hackathon reports

  • Five trip reports from the OpenBSD hackathon in New Zealand! In the first one, jmatthew details his work on fiber channel controller drivers, some octeon USB work and ARM fixes for AHCI
  • In the second, ketennis gets into his work with running interrupt handlers without holding the kernel lock, some SPARC64 improvements and a few other things
  • In the third, jsg updated libdrm and mesa and did various work on xenocara
  • In the fourth, dlg came with the intention to improve SMP support, but got distracted and did SCSI stuff instead – but he talks a little bit about the struggle OpenBSD has with SMP and some of the work he\’s done
  • In the fifth, claudio talks about some stuff he did for routing tables and misc. other things

This episode was brought to you by

\"iXsystems


Interview – Chris Buechler – cmb@pfsense.com / @cbuechler

pfSense


Tutorial

pfSense walkthrough


News Roundup

FreeBSD challenge continues

  • Our buddy from the Linux foundation continues his switching to BSD journey
  • In day 13, he covers some tips for new users, mentions trying things out in a VM first
  • In day 14, he starts setting up XFCE and X11, feels like he\’s starting over as a new Linux user learning the ropes again – concludes that ports are the way to go
  • In day 15, he finishes up his XFCE configuration and details different versions of ports with different names, as well as learns how to apply his first patch
  • In day 16, he dives into the world of FreeBSD jails!

BSD books in 2014

  • BSD books are some of the highest quality technical writings available, and MWL has written a good number of them
  • In this post, he details some of his plans for 2014
  • In includes at least one OpenBSD book, at least one FreeBSD book and…
  • Very strong possibility of Absolute FreeBSD 3rd edition (watch our interview with him)
  • Check the link for all the details

How to build FreeBSD/EC2 images

  • Our friend Colin Percival details how to build EC2 images in a new blog post
  • Most people just use the images he makes on their instances, but some people will want to make their own from scratch
  • You build a regular disk image and then turn it into an AMI
  • It requires a couple ports be installed on your system, but the whole process is pretty straightforward

PCBSD weekly digest

  • This time around we discuss how you can become a developer
  • Kris also details the length of supported releases
  • Expect lots of new features in 10.1

Feedback/Questions

  • Sean writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s216xJoCVG
  • Jake writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2gLrR3VVf
  • Niclas writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s21gfG3Iho
  • Steffan writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2JNyw5BCn
  • Antonio writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2kg3zoRfm
  • Chris writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2ZwSIfRjm

  • Our email backlog is pretty much caught up. Now\’s a great time to send us something – questions, stories, ideas, requests for something you want to see, anything
  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • The OpenBSD router tutorial got a couple improvements and fixes
  • Just because our tutorial contest is over doesn\’t mean you can\’t submit any, we would love if more listeners wrote up a tutorial on interesting things they\’re doing with BSD
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (19:00 UTC)
  • The BSD Now shirt design has been finalized, we have the files and are working out the printing details… expect them to be available in early-to-mid March!

The post A Sixth pfSense | BSD 25 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Eclipsing Binaries | BSD Now 18 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/48817/eclipsing-binaries-bsd-now-18/ Tue, 31 Dec 2013 21:36:57 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=48817 We have an interview with Baptiste Daroussin about the future of FreeBSD binary packages. Following that, a cool script to do binary upgrades on OpenBSD.

The post Eclipsing Binaries | BSD Now 18 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Put away the Christmas trees and update your ports trees! We\’re back with the first show of 2014, and we\’ve got some catching up to do. This time on the show, we have an interview with Baptiste Daroussin about the future of FreeBSD binary packages. Following that, we\’ll be highlighting a cool script to do binary upgrades on OpenBSD. Lots of holiday news and listener feedback, on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


\"iXsystems\"

Direct Download:

Video | HD Video | MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | HD Vid Feed | HD Torrent Feed

– Show Notes: –

Headlines

Faces of FreeBSD continues

  • Our first one details Shteryana Shopova, the local organizer for EuroBSDCon 2014 in Sophia
  • Gives some information about how she got into BSD
  • \”I installed FreeBSD on my laptop, alongside the Windows and Slackware Linux I was running on it at the time. Several months later I realized that apart from FreeBSD, I hadn\’t booted the other two operating systems in months. So I wiped them out.\”
  • She wrote bsnmpd and extended it with the help of a grant from the FreeBSD Foundation
  • We\’ve also got one for Kevin Martin
  • Started off with a pinball website, ended up learning about FreeBSD from an ISP and starting his own hosting company
  • \”FreeBSD has been an asset to our operations, and while we have branched out a bit, we still primarily use FreeBSD and promote it whenever possible. FreeBSD is a terrific technology with a terrific community.\”

OpenPF?

  • A blog post over at the Dragonfly digest
  • What if we had some cross platform development of OpenBSD\’s firewall?
  • Similar to portable OpenSSH or OpenZFS, there could be a centrally-developed version with compatibility glue
  • Right now FreeBSD 9\’s pf is old, FreeBSD 10\’s pf is old (but has the best performance of any implementation due to custom patches), NetBSD\’s pf is old (but they\’re working on a fork) and Dragonfly\’s pf is old
  • Further complicated by the fact that PF itself doesn’t have a version number, since it was designed to just be ‘the pf that came with OpenBSD 5.4’
  • Not likely to happen any time soon, but it\’s good food for thought

Year of BSD on the server

  • A good blog post about switching servers from Linux to BSD
  • 2014 is going to be the year of a lot of switching, due to FreeBSD 10\’s amazing new features
  • This author was particularly taken with pkgng and the more coherent layout of BSD systems
  • Similarly, there was also a recent reddit thread, \”Why did you choose BSD over Linux?\”
  • Both are excellent reads for Linux users that are thinking about making the switch, send \’em to your friends

Getting to know your portmgr

  • This time in the series they interview Bryan Drewery, a fairly new addition to the team
  • He started maintaining portupgrade and portmaster, and eventually ended up on the ports management team
  • Believe it or not, his wife actually had a lot to do with him getting into FreeBSD full-time
  • Lots of fun trivia and background about him
  • Speaking of portmgr, our interview for today is…

This episode was brought to you by

\"iXsystems


Interview – Baptiste Daroussin – bapt@freebsd.org

The future of FreeBSD\’s binary packages, ports\’ features, various topics


Tutorial

Binary upgrades in OpenBSD

  • Using a third party script, binary upgrades in OpenBSD are easy
  • It automates a lot of the manual work and saves time – great for large deployments

News Roundup

pfSense december hang out

  • Interview/presentation from pfSense developer Chris Buechler with an accompanying blog post
  • \”This is the first in what will be a monthly recurring series. Each month, we’ll have a how to tutorial on a specific topic or area of the system, and updates on development and other happenings with the project. We have several topics in mind, but also welcome community suggestions on topics\”
  • Speaking of pfSense, they recently opened an online store
  • We\’re planning on having a pfSense episode next month!

BSDMag December issue is out

  • The free monthly BSD magazine gets a new release for December
  • Topics include CARP on FreeBSD, more BSD programming, \”unix basics for security professionals,\” some kernel introductions, using OpenBSD as a transparent proxy with relayd, GhostBSD overview and some stuff about SSH

OpenBSD gets tmpfs

  • In addition to the recently-added FUSE support, OpenBSD now has tmpfs
  • To get more testing, it was enabled by default in -current
  • Should make its way into 5.5 if everything goes according to plan
  • Enables lots of new possibilities, like our ccache and tmpfs guide

PCBSD weekly digests

  • Catching up with all the work going on in PCBSD land..
  • 10.0-RC2 is now available
  • The big pkgng 1.2 problems seem to have been worked out

Feedback/Questions

  • Remy writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2UrUzlnf6
  • Jason writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2iqnywwKX
  • Rob writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s2IUcPySbh
  • John writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s21aYlbXz2
  • Stuart writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s21vrYSqU8

  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • The jail tutorial and disk encryption tutorial have gotten some improvements and updates
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (19:00 UTC)
  • Happy new year everybody!

The post Eclipsing Binaries | BSD Now 18 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Conference Blues | CR 47 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/36441/conference-blues-cr-47/ Mon, 29 Apr 2013 10:43:31 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=36441 Is it time to reboot the big development conferences? We contrast WWDC to a community focused events and attempt to answer the value question.

The post Conference Blues | CR 47 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Is it time to reboot the big development conferences? We contrast WWDC to a community focused event like LinuxFest Northwest and attempt to answer the value question behind the larger conferences, why pressing the flesh can be important, and if Google Hangouts can be part of the solution.

Plus working from home tricks, making the switch from a 9-5 job to contracting, the start of the great app exit, and does using Chrome make you against the free web?

Thanks to:

Use our code coder295 to get a .COM for $2.95.

 

Direct Download:

MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Video | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | Video Feed | Torrent Feed | iTunes Audio | iTunes Video

Feedback

Conferences

After going on sale at 10:00 AM Pacific Time today, tickets for Apple\’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco have already sold out in two minutes.

WWDC 2011 sold out in under 12 hours, while the 2010 edition took eight days. This marks the sixth straight year that WWDC has sold out, a streak that began in 2008.

LinuxFest Northwest is entering its 14th year! 2012 was our most successful event yet, with around 1200 attendees over the weekend. And 2013 will be undoubtedly our biggest change yet.

The App Exit

I’m happy to announce that I’ve sold a majority stake in Instapaper to Betaworks. We’ve structured the deal with Instapaper’s health and longevity as the top priority, with incentives to keep it going well into the future. I will continue advising the project indefinitely, while Betaworks will take over its operations, expand its staff, and develop it further.

Pick of the week:

[asa]B005TPVTHO[/asa]

Follow the show

The post Conference Blues | CR 47 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Game Time 2 | FauxShow 129 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/32307/game-time-2-fauxshow-129/ Thu, 21 Feb 2013 22:17:30 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=32307 Angela and Chris go head to head against the chat room with another round of Cards Against Humanity and laugh at a few surprises!

The post Game Time 2 | FauxShow 129 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Angela and Chris go head to head against the chat room with another round of Cards Against Humanity. We duck and cover as the crazy cards start flying, take a trip down TV memory lane, and laugh at a few surprises!

Direct Download:

HD Download | Mobile Download | MP3 Download | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

HD Video Feed | Mobile Video Feed | MP3 Audio Feed | Torrent Feed | iTunes Feeds

   


Play the game:

Find FauxShow!

LIVE: https://jblive.tv – 8pm Pacifc – 11pm Eastern – 3am UTC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thefauxshow
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/angerz
G+: https://www.gplus.to/fauxshow
Subscribe to Jupiter Signal: https://www.bit.ly/jupitersignal
Jupiter Radio: https://jblive.info
Affiliates Firefox Extension: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/jupiterbroadcasting/
Affiliates Chrome Extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/bjekemhblnilimncanbehhjijdpjgimj
Donations: https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/donate
Shows & Shownotes: https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/show/fauxshow/

The post Game Time 2 | FauxShow 129 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
I/O Keynote Highlights | FauxShow 96 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/21092/io-keynote-highlights-fauxshow-96/ Wed, 27 Jun 2012 21:27:47 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=21092 Angela, Chris, and Chase cover some of the more exciting moments from the day 1 keynote at Google I/O 2012.

The post I/O Keynote Highlights | FauxShow 96 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Angela, Chris, and Chase cover some of the more exciting moments from the day 1 keynote at Google I/O 2012.

Plus our on air reactions to the big surprise moment, and we dig into the mail sack!

Direct Download:

HD Download | Mobile Download | MP3 Download | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

HD Video Feed | Mobile Video Feed | MP3 Audio Feed | Torrent Feed | iTunes Feeds

   

FauxShow announces the DJ DRAFT:

https://bit.ly/djdraft

Show Notes:

Android Name History:

Android 4.1 Announced (Aka Jelly Bean):

Nexus 7 Tablet:

Nexus Q:

Google Glass Sky Diving:

Mail Sack

Scott writes:

Hi guys .

I was wondering If you had been collecting any data on the effectiveness of the torrent feed and if it is being preferred over the web player or other download methods.

Keep up the AWESOME

Christer writes:

I want to subscribe but I refuse to use Paypal. Is there another way or will you ad another way one could subscribe? It is a matter of principle for me since Paypal froze Wiki-leaks assets.

Stefan writes:

Hi Chris,

I wonder why the Unfilter shows are so big? Isn\’t it more ore less the same as CoderRadio? Those shows are around 300MB, but unfilter is almost as big as LAS.

Best Regards,
Stefan

PS:
And please keep up the great work! I would like to do a monthly contribution, but I don\’t have a CreditCard. Is that Paypal related or don\’t you accept Bank wire transfer through paypal.

The post I/O Keynote Highlights | FauxShow 96 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
LinuxFest Northwest 2012 | LAS | s21e07 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/19087/linuxfest-northwest-2012/ Sun, 29 Apr 2012 13:21:07 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=19087 We push through the fest hangover, and tell you what rocked and what shocked. PLUS - Some Linux video editing tips, and recording Google+ Hangouts!

The post LinuxFest Northwest 2012 | LAS | s21e07 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

We push through the fest hangover, and tell you what rocked and what shocked!

PLUS – Some Linux video editing tips, and recording Google+ Hangouts!

And so much more!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:

GoDaddy.com

Limited time offer: $5.99 .coms, up to 5 domains! just use our code 599com8

Want to save money on your entire order? Use our code spring8 and save 15%!

Direct Download:

HD Video | Mobile Video | Ogg Video | MP3 Audio | Ogg Audio | YouTube | Torrent File

RSS Feeds:

HD Video Feed | Large Video Feed | Mobile Video Feed | MP3 Feed | Ogg Feed | iTunes Feeds | Torrent Feed

Support the Show:

Runs Linux:

Android Pick:

Universal Pick:

Random Distro Of The Day

Linux Action Show Subreddit

Matt’s Howto:

The bulk of the howto is going to be in the video. However, there are some things you need access to.

1) Kdenlive – use this Ubuntu PPA if you’re using Ubuntu 11.10.
In a terminal window:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:sunab/kdenlive-release
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install kdenlive

2) When you first run Kdenlive, it’s likely going to give you some first run errors, regarding ML, cancel instead of closing the app (so the first run wizard runs again later).
If running Ubuntu 11.10 and you’ve added the PPA, you will want to add/update the following.

From Synaptic, search for libmlt++3 – if it’s showing you have anything older than version 0.7.6, update the package. Also double check that libmlt-data and libmlt4 are installed.

Now you can run kdenlive again and it will show everything is working perfectly.

3) To run your webcam successfully in Google Plus hangouts, make sure your webcam is plugged in (directly, no hubs). Open up a Google Plus hangout without joining it. Visit “check settings”. If the webcam is working, great. If it’s not, then close the browser and install WebcamStudio from the latest Deb package. It will installed either via Gdebi or from the Software Center automatically.

3a) If you want/need to run WebcamStudio, perhaps because your webcam wasn’t detected in Firefox or Chrome, start the software, follow along with the video to get the software running with your webcam.

4) Since your end goal is to record Google Plus hangouts as a video, you will need to install the screen recording software known as Kazam.
In a terminal:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:kazam-team/stable-series
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install kazam

5) Open the Kazam software as I showed you in the video and confirm your settings and begin recording. To stop recording once you’ve started, look to the upper right near the network settings and clock, right click on the Kazam widget and stop recording from there. Remember: Do not export to a video editor directly as the video file will not be saved normally. Choose to save it for later instead.

6) With Kazam recording and WebcamStudio using your webcam, open a browser with the Google Video chat plugin installed, browse to Google Plus, then start a hangout.

7) Once the hangout is finished, close the hangout, stop Kazam, save the file, import it into Kdenlive. Drag the video into the timeline, cut the clip as to make sure the area you wish to obscure is covered. Tip: When moving the obscure box corners, understand that it’s very sensitive and getting the cursor into position takes a steady hand. So patience is critical.

8) Save the project, export it as you see fit.

LFNW 2012 Linux Sucks & Linux Does Not Suck Videos:

  1. Why Linux Sucks
  2. Why Linux Does Not Suck

What’s Bryan Doin?

Chris’ Stash:

Find us on Google+
Find us on Twitter:

Follow the network on Facebook:

Jupiter Broadcasting Forum:

Catch the show LIVE Sunday 10am Pacific / 5pm UTC:

The post LinuxFest Northwest 2012 | LAS | s21e07 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>