Shows/Videos: Late Night Linux, McFly, FSF, Evolution, TempleOS, and More
-
Late Night Linux – Episode 205 - Late Night Linux
An application firewall, reverse engineering with a better and scriptable version of Wireshark, getting the most out of webcams on Linux, running the latest kernel on a ten year old phone, moving away from mailing lists, KDE Korner, and the best distro of 2022(?)
-
McFly Utility | Shell History Search written in Rust - Invidious
What's up, Linux Community!!! In this video, I cover the McFly utility. McFly is a replacement for your default ctrl-r shell history search. It uses an intelligent search engine that considers your working directory and the context of recently executed commands.
-
Ruin Christmas With This Open Source Gift Guide - Invidious
Do you want to be that weird aunty or uncle well you're in luck because the free software foundation just recently posted there yearly ethical tech giving guide
-
How to install Moshi Monsters Rewritten Desktop on Linux Mint 21 - Invidious
In this video, we are looking at how to install Moshi Monsters Rewritten Desktop on Linux Mint 21.
-
This Is How Meta Leaked Your WhatsApp Number - Invidious
In this video I show you how Meta leaked your phone number through a bug in their click to chat feature on whatsapp, Meta left this bug unfixed for 2 years and now wants to deny the massive data leak that just came from their platform due to wa.me links being indexed by google and easily enumerated.
-
Evolution Email Client | Replace Outlook! - Invidious
Here we walk through Evolution and basic setup to have a good email client for Linux that fully replaces Outlook.
-
TempleOS lives on... in a very weird way. - Invidious
A quick look at the history of TempleOS — the public domain operating system built as a religious temple -- including the current forked version, known as “ZealOS”. A fork that the original creator, Terry Davis, probably would have hated. It’s a weird, wild ride.
-
Another Novel Use Of Linux: Command Line Screen Reader - Invidious
After being sent endless images of text I decided to mix and match a couple of command line utilities to make this OCR tool I can easily access from GNOME. This requires scrot and tesseract optionally install festival if you want a better sounding tts compared to espeak.