We daily drive Asahi Linux on a MacBook, chat about how the team beat Apple to a major GPU milestone, and an easy way to self-host open-source ChatGPT alternatives.
How we found peace with the Linux community’s perpetual debates; and our tricks for finding the signal from the noise.
There are some stories so big they need a little more air time.
What you need to know about that new OpenSSL vulnerability, the big bcachefs update we've been waiting for, and why the community is creating a Gitea fork.
Microsoft makes a hard about-face, a significant fix for Ubuntu 22.04 is in the works, and the recent breakthrough by the Asahi Linux project.
Fedora gets serious about its server editions, our thoughts on Valve's increased Steam Deck production, and the surprising results of booting Linux on the Apple M2 SoC.
We explore what makes NixOS so powerful, and why it might be the future of all Linux distributions.
We make some last-minute changes to our server setup and catch up on a bunch of thought-provoking feedback.
The nasty Log4Shell vulnerability isn't solved yet, this week saw a new round of attacks and patches.
A desktop from Linux past has a surprising update this week, AlmaLinux pulls ahead of the pack, and Canonical ships software for the Apple M1.
Significant changes at GitHub, Ubuntu starts work on a new desktop tool, why WirePlumber is a big deal, and we bust some Red Hat FUD.
We try out POP!_OS on the Raspberry Pi 4, and chat with its creator Jeremy Soller from System76.
What's new in Debian 11, and an example of the Linux Foundation funneling free software to their corporate friends.
Don't buy that M1-powered Apple machine just yet, solving Wayland-driven fragmentation, and why Firefox is about to get an upgrade on Linux.
The story behind a Microsoft repo shipping in Raspberry Pi OS, Canonical updates a special version of Ubuntu, and a couple of milestones the Linux world hit this week.
Why we don't think Red Hat's expanded developer program is enough, our reaction to Ubuntu sticking with an older Gnome release, and a tiny delightful surprise.
Impressive updates for some beloved open source projects, and AlmaLinux—a leading CentOS alternative—is born.
We explain the recent Qt upset, and then go hands-on with the new PeerTube release.
Friends join us for a special edition of the show to review last year's predictions, and forecast the future.
Red Hat just made big changes to how CentOS works, we breakdown the good, and the bad.
After we geek out about keyboards, we answer some feedback and take a dip in the Rust lust.
A problem that just kept getting worse and worse. What it was, and why it led us to "check in" on EndeavourOS.