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Episode 50: Congratulations!

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Download We are sponsored by audible! http://www.audibletrial.com/programmingthrowdown We are on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/progr...
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Infrastructuralism with Truss
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What is Infrastructuralism and how can it help you think differently about software and large problems? Scott sits down with Everett Harper, CEO of Truss. They talk about how applying some old ideas in new ways helped them fix healthcare.gov.

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Orchestrating and automating deployments with Octopus Deploy and Damian Brady
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We first interviewed Paul Stovell a few years back when he started a micro-ISV he was calling "Octopus Deploy." Now it's a fully formed and successful company whose flagship product Octopus Deploy is used all over. Damian Brady joins Scott and explains why deployment is more subtle then you think.

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Slaying the Arch Zombie | LAS 441 | Jupiter Broadcasting

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What happens if you fail to update your Arch home server for 2 years? Chris finds out the hard way. Plus big Firefox news, a Pirate Kodi update & the Lenovo egg

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https://linuxunplugged.com/171
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https://linuxunplugged.com/176
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Distro Engagement | LAS 446 | Jupiter Broadcasting

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How do you pick the best Linux distribution for you? Plus Canonical says they're taking a stand against unofficial Ubuntu images, a Mycroft update & much more!

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unikernels and unik with Scott Weiss

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The Linux kernel of many popular operating system distributions contains 200-500 million lines of code. The average user never touches many of the libraries that are contained in these operating system distributions. For example, if you spin up a virtual machine on a cloud service provider, the virtual machine will have a USB driver. This

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Being a Polyglot Programmer with Amir Rajan
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You may know Amir from his #1 AppStore Game "A Dark Room." Amir is a programmer who has learned (and continues to learn) multiple programming languages. Is being a polyglot programmer a good idea for all programmers? Which languages should you start with?

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Snap, Flaps & Package Drops | LUP 146
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Package once, run anywhere. But are we finally about to nail it? Plus why you're going to want to wait on that systemd upgrade, funding projects with a rocky past, the big thing about Mycroft no one is talking about & we try out Mycroft on the desktop.

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The Twelve-Factor App: Port Binding, Concurrency, and Disposability

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Time for more DevOps fun as we learn about the Twelve-Factor app. We dive into the next three chapters: port binding, concurrency, and disposability.

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The Twelve-Factor App: Backing Services, Building and Releasing, Stateless Processes

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Config Management Camp: Kubernetes, Sysdig & Mgmt
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I’m back! Sort of. This is a mono-episode where it’s just me talking about Config Management Camp, a conference held in Gent in February 2017.

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211. Token CEO Steve Kirsch • 211. Token CEO Steve Kirsch • 11:FS

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In this episode Serial tech entrepreneur Steve Kirsch (@stkirsch) has founded seven companies and earned a name for himself as the […]
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SSH: Heaven or Shell | LUP 157 | Jupiter Broadcasting

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Our tricks & hacks for SSH, debunking the Linux botnet rampage myth, the new challenges Solus is taking on, an inside track on how FOSS Talk Live went & more!

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GitHub and Google on Public Datasets & Google BigQuery with Arfon Smith from GitHub & Felipe Hoffa and Will Curran from Google (The Changelog #209)

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Arfon Smith from GitHub, and Felipe Hoffa & Will Curran from Google joined the show to talk about BigQuery — the big picture behind Google Cloud’s push to host public datasets, the collaboration between the two companies to expand GitHub’s public dataset, adding query capabilities that have never been possible befo...

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The Twelve Factor App: Dev/Prod Parity, Logs, and Admin Processes

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The Twelve-Factor App: Codebase, Dependencies, and Config

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CodeNewbie

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https://linuxunplugged.com/179
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Cloud Providers with Don Pezet
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In 1999, it took $50,000 to buy a server. Once you bought that server, you had to know how to operate and maintain it. Today, cloud service providers have changed how we build software. Servers, load balancers, networking, storage–these hardware concerns have been turned into software. Don Pezet joins the show today to discuss the
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Secret Management and Vault with Hashicorp’s Seth Vargo

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Every software application has secrets. User passwords and database credentials must be managed carefully, because poor access controls can lead to disaster scenarios. Vault is a tool for secret management, developed at Hashicorp, a company that builds software tools for application delivery and infrastructure management. Seth Vargo is a software engineer and open source advocate

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Including Automation in your Definition of Done with Angie Jones
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Angie Jones is a Consulting Automation Engineer who advises several agile teams on automation strategies and has developed automation frameworks for countless software products. She challenges us to consider including Automation earlier in the product development cycle. Is Automation included in your company's "Definition of Done?"

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Late Night Linux – Episode 01
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Play Podcast (mp3): Download (Duration: 1:16:45 — 53.1MB) In Episode 01 of Late Night Linux we talk about Desktop Linux market share, KDE Neon, Ubuntu Touch, what we think will happen in 2017, …
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Managing Secrets with Vault, with Seth Vargo
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This 3rd episode of SysCast revolves around secrets: managing API keys, passwords, tokens, … with Hashicorp’s Vault.

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CodeNewbie

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Application Security & Cryptography with Scott Arciszewski
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For the 6th episode of SysCast I’m joined by Scott Arciszewski. We talk about PHP, cryptography, securing online applications, cache timing attacks, his CMS called Airship and so much more.

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How we got here with Cory Doctorow (The Changelog #221)

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Cory is a science fiction author, activist, journalist, co-editor of Boing Boing and the author of many books. We talked to Cory about open source, the open web, internet freedom, his involvement with the EFF, where he began his career, the details he’ll be covering in his keynote at OSCON, and his thoughts on open sou...

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Curl, libcurl and the future of the web, with Daniel Stenberg
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If you’re a sysadmin or a developer, you’ve probably used curl before. Or some kind of project, like PHP, Python, Ruby, … that uses libcurl.

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CodeNewbie

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Open source and licensing with Heather Meeker (Request For Commits #9)

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Heather Meeker joined the show to talk about open source licensing, why open source licenses are historically significant, how much developers really need to know, and how much developers think they know. We also talk about mixing commercial and open source licenses, and how lawyers keep up with an ever-changing landsc...
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Slack Security with Ryan Huber

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Security for the popular chat application Slack is a major focus for the company. A corporate Slack account is as valuable to a hacker as a corporate email account. In today’s episode, Ryan Huber and I talk through Slack’s approach to security–from philosophical discussions of how to company approaches security to the technical practices of

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https://changelog.com/podcast/215
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Welcome to the Mosquito Factory

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In humanity's ongoing war against mosquito borne illness, some of the most innovative offense comes in the form mosquito breeding programs. Yes, these "mosquito factories" are all about manipulating...

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We’re Testing Your Patience…

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You're a programmer and you've heard of this thing called "Testing" but you're not sure where to get started. Join us as we get into Unit Testing.

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Source Control Etiquette

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In this podcast we discuss things you should consider when working with others on a project using source control. Do's, don't's and some funny stories.

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Accessories for Programmers

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Our Favorite Tools

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We gather around the Festivus pole this holiday season and before we get into the Airing of Grievances, we discuss our favorite tools.

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GitHub's Electron with Zeke Sikelianos (The Changelog #216)

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Zeke Sikelianos joined the show to talk about GitHub’s Electron project and the future of web folks making cross platform desktop apps. We talked about the web revolution around native vs web app, where Electron is heading, who’s using it, and how cool it is to enable folks like Guillermo Rauch to build HyperTerm.

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Data Breaches with Troy Hunt

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When you hear about massive data breaches like the recent ones from LinkedIn, MySpace, or Ashley Madison, how can you find out whether your own data was compromised? Troy Hunt created the website HaveIBeenPwned.com to answer this question. When a major data breach occurs, Troy acquires a copy of the stolen data and provides
