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Contributors:
Lord Drachenblut, one-time ham radio operator, IRC denizen and podcaster of Ten Buck Review. Lord D has appeared on several other podcasts, including:
The Linux Link Tech Show
Lotta Linux Links
Something Kinda Techy
Linux Cranks
and has been a Linux user for seven or eight years. He uses Linux for everything except for one application that he runs in a virtual Windows machine (Grapevine, the LARP admin utility).
Announcements:
Southeast Linux Fest is June 12-13, 2010, at the Marriott at Renaissance Park hotel in Spartanburg, SC.
Texas Linux Fest is Saturday, April 10, 2010 at the Marchesa Event Center in Austin, Texas.
OggCamp will take place will take place at The Black-E in Liverpool, England, on May 1-2, 2010.
Format change: We’re trying a new format. We’ll still have three segments, but rearranged into housekeeping, feature, then feedback. Let us know what you think.
Russ is trying to organize a Mid-America Linux Fest in Missouri.
We received a donation from Craig toward a noise gate for Richard. Thanks, Craig.
LHS will be at the 2010 Dayton Hamvention in booth 265 in the North Hall (NH0265). See hamvention.org for more information.
The other podcast, Resonant Frequency, is on hiatus for a while.
Contact info:
Russ: [email protected]
Richard: [email protected]
Phone: 888-455-0305 (toll free) or +1-417-429-4069.
Contests:
Logo contest: Send your logo for Linux in the Ham Shack as a product and as a podcast, preferably in scalable vector graphic or tiff format, or a large-sized image in a lossy format such as jpeg. We’d like to use it for T-shirts, banners, etc., and have it available before the Dayton Hamvention. The winner will receive $100! Send your submission to one or both of the email addresses above.
Intro contest: Record your introduction to the show. We’ll use them all. You can record it yourself and email the file, or call us on the phone and record the introduction there. Entries received via the telephone will have two chances to win. We will choose one of them at random to receive $25.
Links and Notes:
OpenSolaris
Debian
openSUSE
Harve’s Hamshack Hack
Linux Mint
Ubuntu
Lord D prefers Debian and Kubuntu, but has recently begun exploring Fedora 12, and found it to support the Broadcom wifi chips without having to install a proprietary driver. Russ says Linux Mint also supports the Broadcom network chips.
Russ has a thumbprint scanner from Thomson Microelectronics that he has not been able to get working under any operating system. Lord D suggests a goat sacrifice may be necessary.
Richard opines that Linux has progressed to the point where it’s better for a new computer user than the other OSs. The panel discusses.
Our panel talks about feature bloat in browsers and performance issues. Everyone seems to like the xmarks add-on to Firefox.
Modular vs monolithic kernels. AX.25 kernel support is available as a module under recent versions of Linux Mint, and appears to be available under Fedora, too.
Jonathan would like to see a Linux application similar to the Windows program Outpost for packet messaging.
Jim, E2ENN, sent an email in response to Episode 31 and raised several issues about Linux drivers. Our panel discusses this message at length.
Nouveau: Accelerated Open Source driver for nVidia cards
The Cathedral and the Bazaar by Eric S. Raymond.
Open FirmWare for WiFi networks
XFree86 vs. Xorg
Knoppix
Music:
By Black Sparrow Media4.4
3838 ratings
Contributors:
Lord Drachenblut, one-time ham radio operator, IRC denizen and podcaster of Ten Buck Review. Lord D has appeared on several other podcasts, including:
The Linux Link Tech Show
Lotta Linux Links
Something Kinda Techy
Linux Cranks
and has been a Linux user for seven or eight years. He uses Linux for everything except for one application that he runs in a virtual Windows machine (Grapevine, the LARP admin utility).
Announcements:
Southeast Linux Fest is June 12-13, 2010, at the Marriott at Renaissance Park hotel in Spartanburg, SC.
Texas Linux Fest is Saturday, April 10, 2010 at the Marchesa Event Center in Austin, Texas.
OggCamp will take place will take place at The Black-E in Liverpool, England, on May 1-2, 2010.
Format change: We’re trying a new format. We’ll still have three segments, but rearranged into housekeeping, feature, then feedback. Let us know what you think.
Russ is trying to organize a Mid-America Linux Fest in Missouri.
We received a donation from Craig toward a noise gate for Richard. Thanks, Craig.
LHS will be at the 2010 Dayton Hamvention in booth 265 in the North Hall (NH0265). See hamvention.org for more information.
The other podcast, Resonant Frequency, is on hiatus for a while.
Contact info:
Russ: [email protected]
Richard: [email protected]
Phone: 888-455-0305 (toll free) or +1-417-429-4069.
Contests:
Logo contest: Send your logo for Linux in the Ham Shack as a product and as a podcast, preferably in scalable vector graphic or tiff format, or a large-sized image in a lossy format such as jpeg. We’d like to use it for T-shirts, banners, etc., and have it available before the Dayton Hamvention. The winner will receive $100! Send your submission to one or both of the email addresses above.
Intro contest: Record your introduction to the show. We’ll use them all. You can record it yourself and email the file, or call us on the phone and record the introduction there. Entries received via the telephone will have two chances to win. We will choose one of them at random to receive $25.
Links and Notes:
OpenSolaris
Debian
openSUSE
Harve’s Hamshack Hack
Linux Mint
Ubuntu
Lord D prefers Debian and Kubuntu, but has recently begun exploring Fedora 12, and found it to support the Broadcom wifi chips without having to install a proprietary driver. Russ says Linux Mint also supports the Broadcom network chips.
Russ has a thumbprint scanner from Thomson Microelectronics that he has not been able to get working under any operating system. Lord D suggests a goat sacrifice may be necessary.
Richard opines that Linux has progressed to the point where it’s better for a new computer user than the other OSs. The panel discusses.
Our panel talks about feature bloat in browsers and performance issues. Everyone seems to like the xmarks add-on to Firefox.
Modular vs monolithic kernels. AX.25 kernel support is available as a module under recent versions of Linux Mint, and appears to be available under Fedora, too.
Jonathan would like to see a Linux application similar to the Windows program Outpost for packet messaging.
Jim, E2ENN, sent an email in response to Episode 31 and raised several issues about Linux drivers. Our panel discusses this message at length.
Nouveau: Accelerated Open Source driver for nVidia cards
The Cathedral and the Bazaar by Eric S. Raymond.
Open FirmWare for WiFi networks
XFree86 vs. Xorg
Knoppix
Music:

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