openshot – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 13 Sep 2021 05:12:30 +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 openshot – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Linux Action News 206 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/146132/linux-action-news-206/ Sun, 12 Sep 2021 21:15:00 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=146132 Show Notes: linuxactionnews.com/206

The post Linux Action News 206 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

Show Notes: linuxactionnews.com/206

The post Linux Action News 206 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Linux Action News 145 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/139492/linux-action-news-145/ Sun, 16 Feb 2020 18:45:00 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=139492 Show Notes: linuxactionnews.com/145

The post Linux Action News 145 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

Show Notes: linuxactionnews.com/145

The post Linux Action News 145 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Fedora’s New Trick | LINUX Unplugged 223 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/119866/fedoras-new-trick-lup-223/ Wed, 15 Nov 2017 02:36:01 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=119866 RSS Feeds: MP3 Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | Torrent Feed Become a supporter on Patreon: Show Notes: Follow Up / Catch Up Firefox 57 “Quantum” Web Browser Now Available to Download, Here’s What’s New Firefox Quantum is roughly 2X faster than Firefox 49 on the Speedometer 2.0 benchmark, thanks to its new […]

The post Fedora’s New Trick | LINUX Unplugged 223 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | Torrent Feed

Become a supporter on Patreon:

Patreon

Show Notes:

Follow Up / Catch Up

Firefox 57 “Quantum” Web Browser Now Available to Download, Here’s What’s New

Firefox Quantum is roughly 2X faster than Firefox 49 on the Speedometer 2.0 benchmark, thanks to its new CSS engine, its “just right” multi-process architecture, the way it prioritizes your active tab, and much more,” reads the preliminary release notes for Firefox 57.0 beta.

Entering the Quantum Era—How Firefox got fast again and where it’s going to get faster

Over the past seven months, we’ve been rapidly replacing major parts of the engine, introducing Rust and parts of Servo to Firefox. Plus, we’ve had a browser performance strike force scouring the codebase for performance issues, both obvious and non-obvious.

We call this Project Quantum, and the first general release of the reborn Firefox Quantum comes out tomorrow.

RedHat Enterprise Linux Announces ARM Support

Today marks a milestone for Red Hat Enterprise Linux with the addition of a new architecture to our list of fully supported platforms. Red Hat Enterprise Linux for ARM is a part of our multi-architecture strategy and the culmination of a multi-year collaboration with the upstream community and our silicon and hardware partners.

Red Hat took a pragmatic approach to Arm servers by helping to drive open standards and develop communities of customers, partners and a broad ecosystem. Our goal was to develop a single operating platform across multiple 64-bit ARMv8-A server-class SoCs from various suppliers while using the same sources to build user functionality and consistent feature set that enables customers to deploy across a range of server implementations while maintaining application compatibility.
In 2015, we introduced a Development Preview of the operating system to silicon partners, such as Cavium and Qualcomm, and OEM partners, like HPE, that designed and built systems based on a 64-bit Arm architecture. A great example of this collaboration was the advanced technology demonstration by HPE, Cavium, and Red Hat at the International Supercomputing conference in June 2017. That prototype solution became part of HPE’s Apollo 70 system, announced today. If you are attending SuperComputing17 this week, please stop by Red Hat’s booth (#1763) to learn more about this new system.

Qualcomm Launches 48-core Centriq for $1995: Arm Servers for Cloud Native Applications

The cores are 64-bit only, and are grouped into duplexes – pairs of cores with a shared 512KB of L2 cache, and the top end design will also have 60 MB of L3 cache. The full design has 6 channels of DDR4 (Supporting up to 768 GB) with 32 PCIe Gen 3.0 lanes, support for Arm Trustzone, and all within a TDP of 120W and for $1995.

Cray will use Cavium’s ThunderX2 processors in a version of its XC50 supercomputer scheduled to arrive in the second quarter of 2018, Cray said in a press release Monday. I

Kernel 4.14 Released

Linux 4.14 features a number of new features and changes, and is set to become the next long term support (LTS) release backed by several years of ongoing maintenance and support.

  • New Realtek Wi-Fi driver (RTL8822BE)
  • Btrfs Zstd compression support
  • HDMI CEC support for Raspberry Pi
  • Secure memory encryption for AMD EPYC processors
  • ASUS T100 touchpad support
  • Heterogeneous Memory Management
  • AMDGPU DRM Vega improvements
  • Better support for Ryzen processors

Linux Academy

OpenShot 2.4 Released

Among the big changes OpenShot 2.4.1 features is improved image quality. You should now see sharper images in the preview window when editing thanks to an “improved image processing pipeline”.

There’s also improved playback smoothness when working with high frame-rate videos at 50fps, 60fps, and 120fps.

GNOME Shell 4 Proposal Published To Be More Wayland-Focused

Jonas Adahl of Red Hat has volleyed his initial proposals for how a “future” GNOME Shell could be architected on a page entitled GNOME Shell 4. This GNOME Shell 4 would potentially break compatibility with GNOME Shell 3 extensions while being more designed around Wayland rather than X11.

Initiatives/Wayland/GnomeShell/GnomeShell4 – GNOME Wiki!

To sum it up, there are a number of problem areas that needs new solutions.

  1. Low latency input forwarding
  2. Low latency visual input event feedback (pointer cursor movement)
  3. Low latency & zero copy client content forwarding (scan-out of client buffer)
  4. Input methods in the shell UI
  5. Stalls on the main thread stalls compositor frame redraws

James Nugent

This week we interview James Nugent, a software developer from Bath, England. He currently works in engineering at Joyent, an open source public cloud company recently acquired by Samsung Electronics. Previously, James was a core contributor at HashiCorp building operations tooling, and Event Store LLP, which produces an open source stream database with a built in projections system. For a comprehensive breakdown of the episode and showlinks take a look at the shownotes below or by clicking the episode title.

DigitalOcean

Fedora 27

New Fedora 27 Workstation Features

  • End of the Alpha release of Fedora

  • Gnome 3.26. This brings a new and improved Builder IDE to bear for developers, providing a new interface, contextual popups, improved search functions and a new debugger.

  • GNOME 3.26 adds support for fractional scaling for high DPI screens.
  • Both the Display and Network configuration panels have been updated, along with the overall Settings panel appearance improvement.
  • Also the antiquated system tray has been removed to reduce visual clutter and confusion

  • TRIM support for encrypted disks which enhances the performance of Fedora Workstation on solid-state drives (SSDs).

Other Fedora 27 Changes

  • Fedora Atomic: changed the way of setting up containers. Kubernetes is now containerized and Cockpit includes Dashboard installation on Atomic Host via rpm package layering
  • Pipewire. Our new media handling deamon. It will be used in Fedora Workstation 27 to handle screen sharing and screen capture under GNOME Shell.

  • Fedora KDE Switched to the version 5.9.1 of QT5

  • What’s New in Fedora 27 Workstation – Fedora Magazine

Fedora 27 Workstation is the latest release of our free, leading-edge operating system. You can download it from the official website here right now. There are several new and noteworthy changes in Fedora Workstation.


TING

Encryption Another Point of View

We’ve all seen it plastered on the national news these last two years. The encryption debate between tech companies and civilians wanting to keep their data private is being weighed against the government’s desire to gain access to anything and everything they can in the hunt to stop terrorists. Anyone besides me ever notice it’s always “terrorists,” not just criminals? Anyway, the thought occurred to me late last night to look at the argument another way and see what I’d feel about it. It’s not a hard decision for me, personally. I’m firmly ensconced on the side of a person’s right to privacy over some government’s desire to monitor its citizens. Still, maybe it’s worth trying to have the conversation another way. Let’s take the technology out of it and consider the idea as it would relate to the rights of privacy of the individual.

The government argues that the kinds of data being hidden behind encryption provides important clues they need to stop terrorists. The data able to be retrieved from a cell phone or tablet, or encrypted text messaging, can be viewed in very simple terms, and I think I can probably give you an inclusive list. Let’s see:

  • Where they have been (using the GPS tracking)
  • When they were there, when they communicated, etc. (using time stamps from apps)
  • What they’ve read online (using browser/app histories)
  • Who they’ve talked to (using messenger/email contact lists)
  • How they’ve communicated (analyzing what apps they use to talk to other people)
  • The contents of any textual conversations/emails (reading the message history)
  • What files they might have downloaded, saved, or deleted. (using information within the device)

I didn’t intend it this way, but the list above shows you can literally tell Who, What, When and Where some suspect was doing something. The only thing you can’t definitively tell is the “why” of it all. We assume the why factor is able to be extrapolated from the other four to provide a complete picture of the terror suspect’s life.

The post Fedora’s New Trick | LINUX Unplugged 223 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Dubstep Allan | LAS 463 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/113386/dubstep-allan-las-463/ Sat, 01 Apr 2017 22:36:39 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=113386 RSS Feeds: HD Video Feed | Large Video Feed | Mobile Video Feed | MP3 Audio Feed | Ogg Audio Feed | iTunes Feed | Torrent Feed Become a supporter on Patreon: — Show Notes: — Brought to you by: Linux Academy The real reason LAS is ending Noah reveals the real reason LAS is […]

The post Dubstep Allan | LAS 463 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
RSS Feeds:

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

Become a supporter on Patreon:

Patreon

— Show Notes: —


LinuxAcad

Brought to you by: Linux Academy

The real reason LAS is ending

  • Noah reveals the real reason LAS is ending, discussing the details with Allan.
  • Allan has been helping Noah for months.
  • Allan has been helping Noah for months.
  • Noah is switching from Telegram to Threema
  • Plus another major switch!

— PICKS —

Runs Linux

Desktop App Pick


— NEWS —

Open Shot 2.3 Released

  • new transform tool (make pictures bounce/scale etc – real-time transformations in preview window )
  • razor tool (back from version 1.4.3) quickly cut clips or transitions
  • better zoom (in and out of timeline – centers on mouse position)
  • improved title editor (grid of thumbnails to make finding the correct title easier)
  • better animated titles (type, pick color, refresh)
  • new preview window (dedicated video player – multiple video preview windows at the same time, renders audiofiles a waveform by default)
  • huge update (esp real-time preview performance – fewer freezes, hangs, frame detection)
  • new user guide using sphynx documentation
  • better audio
  • improved export dialog, new windows build server (the development system died), gitHub bug management
  • his kids put together a cat video

Steinberg Brings VSTs to Linux

  • VST plug in
  • 3.6.7 version of their plug-in SKD for Linux (in addition to other OS)
  • nice for developers and end users
  • more native plug-ins for linux
  • cmake support
  • VST3 SDK on GitHub
  • GPL v3 license is now alongside the proprietary license (necessary for some open projects)

RedHat Profit Highest since 2015

  • shares climbed 6% on Tuesday – best day since March 2015

  • surpassed 30 day average trading volume of 1.83 million shares on Tuesday — with more than 1.89 million shares changing hands before noon

  • Revenue: $629 million vs $619 million expected (Fourth Quarter 2017)

  • The company’s subscription revenue, which accounted for 89 percent of total revenue for the quarter, was at $560 million, or up 17 percent from one year ago Red Hat said. It crossed $2 billion in annual subscription revenue for the first time this fiscal year.

  • first-ever deal of approximately $100 million in the fourth quarter

  • As of Monday’s close, shares of Red Hat were up more than 17 percent for the year and up more than 12 percent over the past 12 months.

  • Shares closed at $82.20 Monday and were trading above $86 per share after hours, on the heels of the company’s upbeat fourth-quarter earnings report.

Apple’s new FIle System

Feedback:

Mail Bag
  • Name: Jonathan G
  • Subject: LAS Feedback

  • Message:

I just started watching LAS starting in January, and last week I overheard co-workers talking about Linux and I had to jump in and tell them about LAS. Was behind on my podcast watching but just finished 462. Sad to see this chapter ending but happy to see what you both will bring to us next. One thing that would love to see in Ask Noah or maybe in a monthly’ish podcast: do picks and dist reviews when the make scene. Do your top 5-10 app pick and what new dist came out. I really like those, but some times the picks and dist felt like you were forcing it too much. I have enjoyed LAS and really hope to more from Jupiter broadcasting.

  • Name: Efrain C
  • Subject: LAS – More than just Linux
  • Message:

hey Chris i’m writing this to you to say thank you so much for LAS.around 2010 i got hurt on my job and was home with nothing to do,sad having depression on top of that. it was very hard time for me.but i thought i try something new and watch a watch called Las on youtube.And thanks to you and Angela’s (fauxshow).i was able to deal with it and survive.i know this is not a linux question,but i thought you should hear this.linux not just a OS it can be so much more.i’m not a big linux user i’m still a bit of a noob .but i do like it.i use it every day.and i do try to switch people to it.and ohh Noah love you dude your one hell of a smart ass don’t stop doing what you do,guys like me who are not big on linux still care to know something about it,so i can’t wait to see ask Noah.and learn.sorry if this was to long,i just wanted to say thank you and i love you guys.

Catch the show LIVE SUNDAY:

— CHRIS’ STASH —

Chris’s Twitter account has changed, you’ll need to follow!

Chris Fisher (@ChrisLAS) | Twitter

Hang in our chat room:

irc.geekshed.net #jupiterbroadcasting

— NOAH’S STASH —

Noah’s Day Job

Altispeed Technologies

Contact Noah

noah [at] jupiterbroadcasting.com

Find us on Twitter

The post Dubstep Allan | LAS 463 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Binary Decisions | LINUX Unplugged 160 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/102656/binary-decisions-lup-160/ Tue, 30 Aug 2016 21:12:53 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=102656 RSS Feeds: MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | Torrent Feed | WebM Torrent Feed Become a supporter on Patreon: Show Notes: Follow Up / Catch Up OpenShot Video Editor | Blog: OpenShot 2.1 Released! Avidemux 2.6.13 Open-Source Video Editor Gets AAC/ADTS Import and Export Editorial: I ditched SteamOS in […]

The post Binary Decisions | LINUX Unplugged 160 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | Torrent Feed | WebM Torrent Feed

Become a supporter on Patreon:

Patreon

Show Notes:

Follow Up / Catch Up

OpenShot Video Editor | Blog: OpenShot 2.1 Released!

Editorial: I ditched SteamOS in favour of a normal Linux distribution for my gaming

That was the final nail in the coffin for my time with SteamOS. I don’t have time to deal with such breakage.

Maru OS mixes a custom ROM with a dockable Debian desktop, and now it’s open source


TING

Fedora 24 review: The year’s best Linux distro is puzzlingly hard to recommend

In the end, despite how much I enjoyed using Fedora 24 for a couple of months, it hasn’t convinced me to give up Arch. That’s not a totally fair comparison since much of what I like about Arch is that it’s a rolling release, but I would be more inclined to embrace Fedora if it had either a long-term support type of release that would last several years or a rolling release that dealt out updates as they were ready. As it stands, Fedora sits somewhere in the middle and ends up with an often awkward update process happening all too frequently. It’s possible that the new tools in DNF (and GNOME Software) will make things easier on the update front, but for now that’s far from certain.

Purism announces the creation of its Advisory Board

Purism is pleased to announce the creation of its Advisory Board, comprised of top-tier experts from the Free Software community: Kyle Rankin, Matthew Garrett, Aaron Grattafiori, and Stefano Zacchiroli. Together, they bring their vision—with decades of experience in cybersecurity, privacy protection, and digital freedom—to Purism’s product development, as the company continues to create products that finally address privacy and digital rights by default, rights that 86% of computer users cite as a concern.

Linus Torvalds Announces Linux Kernel 4.8 RC4 with Skylake Power Management Fix

the biggest new feature being a fix for an Intel Skylake power management bug. However, there are also the usual updated drivers, arch improvements, and some KVM changes.

DigitalOcean

Grepping logs is terrible

You see, the main difference between me and proponents of text-based log storage is that I want my queries and their results to be human readable, and I don’t care how that is accomplished. They, on the other hand, want their raw data to be human readable, and would sacrifice convenience for the sake of being able to keep data textual.

Linux Academy

Kent Overstreet is creating bcachefs – a next generation Linux filesystem

Wimpy Goes All In on Ubuntu Touch

How to install Ubuntu on Meizu Pro 5 that was originally with Android?

Note: If you are using the global version, you needn’t do this setup.

Post-Show:

The post Binary Decisions | LINUX Unplugged 160 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Going For The 4.0 | Tech Talk Today 133 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/77347/going-for-the-4-0-tech-talk-today-133/ Fri, 13 Feb 2015 11:05:32 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=77347 An executive order is about to bring voluntary CISPA to the US, we’ll explain what we know. Linus takes it to a vote and asks the Internet if its time for Linux 4.0 & some great news from the OpenShot project. Direct Download: MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Video | HD Video | Torrent […]

The post Going For The 4.0 | Tech Talk Today 133 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

An executive order is about to bring voluntary CISPA to the US, we’ll explain what we know. Linus takes it to a vote and asks the Internet if its time for Linux 4.0 & some great news from the OpenShot project.

Direct Download:

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

RSS Feeds:

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

Become a supporter on Patreon

Foo

Show Notes:

Obama Heads to Tech Security Talks Amid Tensions – NYTimes.com

PALO ALTO, Calif. — President Obama will meet here on Friday with the nation’s top technologists on a host of cybersecurity issues and the threats posed by increasingly sophisticated hackers. But nowhere on the agenda is the real issue for the chief executives and tech company officials who will gather on the Stanford campus: the deepening estrangement between Silicon Valley and the government.

The long history of quiet cooperation between Washington and America’s top technology companies — first to win the Cold War, then to combat terrorism — was founded on the assumption of mutual interest. Edward J. Snowden’s revelations shattered that. Now, the Obama administration’s efforts to prevent companies from greatly strengthening encryption in commercial products like Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android phones has set off a new battle, as the companies resist government efforts to make sure police and intelligence agencies can crack the systems.

Obama to sign executive order on sharing cybersecurity threat information – The Washington Post

President Obama will sign an executive order Friday that urges companies to share cybersecurity-threat information with one another and the federal government.

The order is advisory in nature and comes as the White House will kick off its first summit on Cybersecurity and Consumer Protection at Stanford University on Friday. The summit, which will focus on public-private partnerships and consumer protection, is part of a recent White House push to focus on cybersecurity.

It encourages the development of central clearinghouses for companies and the government to share data and creation of centers where data can be shared across specific geographic regions.

Apple Promoting “Great Games with No In-App Purchases” on App Store Front Page – MacStories

Apple has started promoting games that don’t have any In-App Purchases on the front page of the App Store. Currently featured in the UK App Store and likely expanding to the U.S. store later today as part of the App Store’s weekly refresh, the section is called ‘Pay Once & Play’ and it showcases “great games” that don’t require users to pay for extra content through IAPs.

Linus Torvalds – Google+

I was making noises about just moving to 4.0 some time ago. But let’s see what people think.

Galaxy 6 Exynos 7420 is 14nm SoC

The Exynos 7420 SoC will be a 14nm octa-core, with four Cortex-A57 cores and four slower Cortex-A53 cores. Most of the chips coming in 2015 will use ARM’s big.LITTLE approach, but in 20nm. Samsung Exynos 7420 is 14nm and is also using Mali-T760 GPU. We have the manufacturing node confirmed by multiple sources but you only need to wait for the March 1 to see the official announcement at the Mobile World Congress Galaxy S6 launch event.

OpenShot Video Editor for Windows, Mac, and Linux by Jonathan Thomas — Kickstarter

There are many challenges that go along with building any software. Some are obvious and some are more subtle. However, some challenges, as I’ve recently realized, aren’t related to computers at all. Sometime in late October, my wife and I decided that it would be fun to put our house on the market, and “test the waters”. We have been talking about moving out of Arlington, TX (a relatively big city) for years, and heading towards a bit more land, and less city. As fate would have it, we had an offer on our house within 1 week, and all of a sudden needed to find a new house, make repairs, pack, rent a moving truck, etc… etc… Needless to say, this required a lot of time and energy.

In App Mayhem | FauxShow 167

Angela and Chris talk about the different ways ads and in app purchases make it onto our mobile devices, what can be done about it, and how the community feels about it.

The post Going For The 4.0 | Tech Talk Today 133 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
OpenShot 2.0 Interview | LAS 314 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/58192/openshot-2-0-interview-las-314/ Sun, 25 May 2014 14:11:25 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=58192 Jonathan Thomas, founder of the OpenShot join us to update us on the latest with his open source cross platform video editor. Plus we discuss the challenges and benefits of crowd funded open source, the task of building a video editor for Linux, and more. Then our take on the big Linux gaming controversy of […]

The post OpenShot 2.0 Interview | LAS 314 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Jonathan Thomas, founder of the OpenShot join us to update us on the latest with his open source cross platform video editor. Plus we discuss the challenges and benefits of crowd funded open source, the task of building a video editor for Linux, and more.

Then our take on the big Linux gaming controversy of the week, a little Chrome hat eating…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:


\"DigitalOcean\"


\"Ting\"

Download:

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

RSS Feeds:

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

— Show Notes: —

Jonathan Thomas of OpenShot:


\"System76\"

Brought to you by: System76

\"OpenShot

OpenShot Video Editor is a free, open-source video editor for Linux licensed under the GPL version 3.0.

OpenShot can take your videos, photos, and music files and help you create the film you have always dreamed of. Easily add sub-titles, transitions, and effects, and then export your film to DVD, YouTube, Vimeo, Xbox 360, and many other common formats.

\”I use OpenShot as my main editor, the only parts that really get to me are when I need to add \” Titles\” and \”Credits\”. It just feels a bit overly complex. Are there plans to overhaul this in the UI while at the same time keeping the editing tracks as they are?\”

  • Linda Dean:

Will the updates include the ability to easily insert a photo into a title? I love the advanced editor, but it can be very complicated to the uninitiated.


— Picks —

Runs Linux

BAT, the Airborne wind turbine Runs Linux

BAT stands for buoyant airborne turbine

Desktop App Pick

Pinta: Painting Made Simple – Pinta

Pinta is a free, open source drawing/editing program modeled after Paint.NET. Its goal is to provide users with a simple yet powerful way to draw and manipulate images on Linux, Mac, and Windows.

Weekly Spotlight

Mosh: the mobile shell

Remote terminal application that
allows roaming, supports intermittent connectivity, and provides intelligent local echo and line editing of user keystrokes.

Mosh is a replacement for SSH. It\’s more robust and responsive, especially over Wi-Fi, cellular, and long-distance links.

Mosh is free software, available for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, Mac OS X, and Android.


— NEWS —

The Quality Of The Witcher 2 Linux Port Is Upsetting Many Gamers

\"Witcher

Yesterday marked the release of The Witcher 2 Officially Released For Linux for Linux gamers. This is the first time The Witcher is coming to Linux, but sadly the quality of the port leaves a lot to be desired.

TechView: Linus Torvalds Interview

\"Linus

Google Chrome Aura Lands on Linux In Latest Stable Update

\"Chrome

If you like using Google Chrome and Pipelight read this!

\"Chrome

— Feedback —

— Chris\’ Stash —

Hang in our chat room:

irc.geekshed.net #jupiterbroadcasting

— What’s Matt Doin? —

— Find us on Google+ —

— Find us on Twitter —

— Follow the network on Facebook: —

— Catch the show LIVE Sunday 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 6pm UTC: —

The post OpenShot 2.0 Interview | LAS 314 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>
Linux’s Wirecast Problem | LAS s26e06 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/35331/linuxs-wirecast-problem-las-s26e06/ Sun, 14 Apr 2013 12:46:15 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=35331 This week we come clean on why the world’s #1 Linux podcast is edited on a Hackintosh. And what it's going to take for things to get any better.

The post Linux’s Wirecast Problem | LAS s26e06 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

Even we have to admit Linux has a few important weak spots that remain. This week we come clean on why the world’s #1 Linux podcast is edited on a Hackintosh. Why we feel it’s going to require a radical technology leap for the situation to get any better, and some near term hopes.

Plus: SSH Tunnels vs VPNs, how to quickly use an SSH tunnel for an application specific need, details on a lightweight KDE based desktop coming soon, Nvidia’s answer to Linus’ F&#CK YOU…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:

Use our code linux295 to score .COM for just $2.95!

35% off your ENTIRE order just use our code go35off3 until the end of the month!

 

Visit las.ting.com to save $25 off your device or service credits.

 

Download:

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

RSS Feeds:

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

Support the Show:

— Show Notes: —

Linux’s Wirecast Problem:


System76

Brought to you by: System76

Video:

Encoding:


– Picks –

Runs Linux:

Android Pick:

Desktop App Pick:

Search our past picks:

Git yours hands all over our STUFF:


— NEWS —

— /etc: SSH Tunnels —


Untangle

Brought to you by: Untangle

SSH Tunnel Command:

sudo ssh -N username@remotehost -L 80:localhost:80

– Feedback: –

— Chris’ Stash —

irc.geekshed.net #jupiterbroadcasting

— What’s Matt Doin? —

— Find us on Google+ —
— Find us on Twitter —
— Follow the network on Facebook: —
— Catch the show LIVE Sunday 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 6pm UTC: —

The post Linux’s Wirecast Problem | LAS s26e06 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> OpenShot Founder Interview | LAS | s23e10 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/25666/openshot-founder-interview-las-s23e10/ Sun, 07 Oct 2012 12:45:27 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=25666 We chat with Jonathan Thomas of OpenShot, why he started the project, and what the future looks like for OpenShot.

The post OpenShot Founder Interview | LAS | s23e10 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>

post thumbnail

We chat with Jonathan Thomas of OpenShot, why he started the project, and what the future looks like for OpenShot.

Plus: Is the best fix for Ubuntu’s NSFW Amazon results really disabling all online integration altogether? Is this an overreaction, or just a simple fix?

And we’ll talk about a new hackable tablet, the good news for gamers, a new file system, some interesting rumors…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:

GoDaddy.com

GoDaddy.com

Limited time offer:
SPECIAL OFFER! SPECIAL OFFER! .COMs just $5.99* per year up to 3 domains! Additional .COMs just $7.99* per year! – code: 599linux

BONOUS ROUND PROMO:

Save 20% off your order!
Code: go20off6

Expires 10/31/12

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:

Show Notes:

Runs Linux:

Android Pick:

Desktop App Pick:

Distro Of The Day

Search our past picks:

Git yours hands all over our STUFF:

News:

Jonathan Thomas of OpenShot:


System76

Brought to you by: System76

Feedback:

Chris’ Stash:

What’s Matt Doin?

Find us on Google+
Find us on Twitter:

Follow the network on Facebook:

Jupiter Broadcasting Forum:

Catch the show LIVE Sunday 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 5pm UTC:

The post OpenShot Founder Interview | LAS | s23e10 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]>