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The main developer and founder of Trisquel GNU/Linux Ruben Rodriguez joins us to discuss the projects mission, the major headwinds it faces, what the future holds, and their new focus on privacy.

Plus: Mark Shuttleworth sees a future where Ubuntu powers Robots and Drones, a mini-review of KDE Plasma 5.2 desktop, what’s coming up in Gnome…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

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— Show Notes: —

Trisquel Developer Rubén Rodríguez a.k.a. quidam Interview





Brought to you by: System76

GNUzilla is the GNU version of the Mozilla suite, and GNU IceCat is

the GNU version of the Firefox browser. Its main advantage is an

ethical one: it is entirely free software.

While the Firefox source code from the Mozilla project is free

software, they distribute and recommend non-free software as

plug-ins and addons. Also their trademark license restricts distribution

in several ways incompatible with freedom 0.

This Sunday we’re speaking with one of the Trisquel developers, we need your questions. If you’ve ever had a question about Trisquel… here’s your chance.

— PICKS —

Runs Linux

At the beginning moving computers was a real challenge. The problem was not just their quite big weight, but also their size which made it difficult to put them in a right place even though it was possible to lift them. Computer portability has been improving along with developing a PC. However, it still isn’t ideal as it is necessary to transport a lot of its parts – a monitor, a keyboard, a CPU and a mouse. The approach to computer design and appearance has been the same until today. We are introducing Mouse-Box, a computer different than ever before. An incredible combination of the two most important elements in a computer set – a computer and a mouse.

Desktop App Pick

SWATd is a daemon for running scripts when your house gets raided by the police

(or broken into by criminals). For example, if you use any kind of encryption,

you can use SWATd to destroy the keys, instead of hoping the police (or

criminals) are stupid enough to unplug your computer. SWATd can also be used

for more mundane things like sending an email notification when a server goes

down.

Weekly Spotlight

DEX UI is a combination of my love for futuristic interfaces and desktop customization. It’s a handcrafted interface programmed in openFrameworks, running fullscreen underneath a functioning terminal, as essentially an animated desktop.

These are the weekly picks provided by the Jupiter Broadcasting podcast, the Linux Action Show. This site includes a separate picks lists for the “Runs Linux”, Desktop Apps, Spotlight Picks, Android Picks, and Distro Picks.

— NEWS —

Mark Shuttleworth takes a look at

Ubuntu and the Internet of Things. “Ubuntu is right at the heart of

the “internet thing” revolution, and so we are in a good position to raise

the bar for security and consistency across the whole ecosystem. Ubuntu is

already pervasive on devices — you’ve probably seen lots of “Ubuntu in the

wild” stories, from self-driving cars to space programs and robots and the

occasional airport display. I’m excited that we can help underpin the next

wave of innovation while also thoughtful about the responsibility that

entails. So today we’re launching snappy Ubuntu Core on a wide range of

boards, chips and chipsets, because the snappy system and Ubuntu Core are perfect for distributed, connected devices that need security updates for the OS and applications but also need to be completely reliable and self-healing. Snappy is much better than package dependencies for robust, distributed devices.”

I’m happy to announce the release of pfSense(r) software version 2.2! This release brings improvements in performance and hardware support from the FreeBSD 10.1 base, as well as enhancements we’ve added such as AES-GCM with AES-NI acceleration, among a number of other new features and bug fixes. Jim Thompson

Today KDE releases a beta for Plasma 5.2. This release adds a number of new components and improves the existing desktop. We welcome all testers to find and help fix the bugs before our stable release in two weeks’ time.

The second batch of testing images for Kubuntu 15.04 is out and it looks like the developers are definitely on the right track. This is the first Kubuntu edition that integrates the new Plasma 5 desktop and the rest of the components from the former KDE SC. This latest edition of Kubuntu is quite exciting and none of the flavors for the Vivid launch has such a big change in the desktop paradigm.

Mutter 3.15.4 was checked in this morning by Florian Müllner and it has Wayland improvements and other exciting changes with GTK+ now drawing all window decorations, a change to replicate the monitor EDID parsing for Mutter on Wayland so it acts the same way as under X11, Mutter now handles input device configuration, and there’s support for pointer barriers with Mutter on Wayland. The pointer barriers on Wayland will ensure that the pointer never enters “dead areas” of the screen due to different monitor sizes, etc.

Crowd Supply, a curated crowd-funding and e-commerce company has been working on funding the first pure free-software laptop, the Purism Librem 15. The Kickstarter-like project had been seeking $250,000 to create the “first high-end laptop in the world that ships without mystery software in the kernel, operating system, or any software applications.” On January 21st, the company achieved its goal. As of January 22nd, the project has raised just over $260,000. Purism, the company behind the Librem 15, promises that it will ship an Intel CPU fused to run unsigned BIOS code. The hope is that this will allow a future where free software can replace the proprietary, digitally signed, BIOS binaries.

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