A special guest joins us for the news, then we dive headfirst into our RT Linux kernel adventures—where speed seduced, but stability ghosted us.
Our thoughts on big tech firing up old nuclear reactors to satisfy the AI growth plans, Sam's big week, and debate if Meta just had their iPhone moment.
The things we like in the new Nextcloud release, and we attempt to upgrade our production server live—from a big blue bus.
Brent's computer pulls an all-nighter at the worst possible moment, and the hits keep coming for open-source Android distributions and our new 2FA tool.
The COSMIC desktop is just around the corner. We get the inside scoop from System76 and go hands-on with an early press build.
Our take on why several tech companies just teamed up to take on Google Maps, and then we react to the global analyst who says we won't have any new iPhones until 2028. We don't talk about Elon; if we did, it would be chaptered. But we definitely did not.
It's the third annual Unplugged Tuxies; our community votes on the best projects, distros, desktops, and services of 2022.
What the heck is going on? Fedora is dropping features, GNOME is getting Iced, and the mistake we'll never make again. We've got a lot to sort out.
Pop_OS! 22.04 has a surprise you might not have noticed, we get the details on Ubuntu’s new Real-Time kernel, and the clever idea from the Framework laptop team.
There's just something off about Ubuntu these days, this week we put it all together.
It's the second annual Unplugged Tuxies; our community votes on the best projects, distros, desktops, and services of 2021.
Has Google already started its decline? Our surprising take.
We try out Pop!_OS 21.04 and share our thoughts on the COSMIC desktop and our reaction to Audacity’s new troubling privacy policy.
Mike's got some strong feels about his new system, and Chris spent a week with Windows 11. And that's not even scratching the surface. It's a wild one, with some hard truths, so buckle up.
Our thoughts on the hardware Apple announced this week, and if any of it is suitable for professional workloads.
You should never host your own email, so we’ve gone and done just that. What we learned trying to build an email server in 2021.
The major shift in the Linux landscape this week that was hardly noticed, and our thoughts on COSMIC from System76.