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• Reference to XBMC and the potential for Jellyfin to be a modern version of that project
• Promotion of jupiter.party and membership benefits
• Comparison of home assistants for privacy and functionality
• Integration of Mycroft with Home Assistant and potential issues with Google speech-to-text
• Concerns about relying on cloud-based services for voice transcription
• Alternative text-to-speech service through Nebukasa Cloud offering improved sound quality
• Use of Nebukasa's service for nighttime scripts in Home Assistant setup
• Discussion of bedtime mode and its limitations
• Desire for a local solution to tie into speakers and control devices
• Introduction to Mycroft integration and request for user feedback
• Boost from Gene Bean and his question about backing up Nextcloud
• Explanation of the speaker's backup strategy using ZFS, replication, and other tools
• The cost of backing up large amounts of data (25 terabytes) and the limitations of current backup options
• AWS Glacier as a potential backup solution, but expensive for large data sets
• Alternative option: building a server to store data at a friend's house or on-site
• Use of Jupyter.tube for live streaming and recording podcasts
• Fountain app for value-for-value podcast boosting, with mixed reviews from users
• The Rune Lifetime used to cost $499, but is now $699.
• The CEO threatened to pull the product due to unsustainable costs.
• A listener bought the lifetime subscription because they prefer a one-time payment over monthly fees.
• Feature voting on the Rune forum showed that users want the offline grace period for servers re-enabled.
• This may be a defining moment for the company, and how they respond will impact future decisions.
• The Zimra board was mentioned as an alternative to Raspberry Pi, but the speaker is skeptical about buying one.
• Device is designed for installation in a vehicle due to its ruggedized features
• Concerns about company viability and potential Kickstarter pitfalls
• Discussion of device's performance, storage, and compatibility with peripherals
• Comparison to Odroid solution and concerns about form factor and design intent
• Potential uses and customizations of the device despite reservations
• Great submissions and boosts from community members, including MG, J-Cube, Nev, Acorn, and Thumbs
• Discussion of terminal emulators and apps, with user recommending Hollywood as a favorite app
• User memories of listening to the podcast in specific places and how it brought back memories
• Conversation about careers and life-changing moments sparked by listening to the podcast
• Discussion of an old interview where Docker wasn't yet called Docker
• Mentions of boosts and messages sent by "Ninja Mort" with no context or explanation
• Promotion of the podcast's membership program and self-hosted platform
• Mention of a Matrix instance for Jupyter broadcasting
• Acknowledgement of Alex for updating the infrastructure due to OpenSSL patches
• Setting up unattended upgrades on Ubuntu boxes
• Alex recommends using Ubuntu systems with auto-updates
• Discussing the effectiveness of automated security patches
• Mentioning feedback and contact information for the podcast
• Off-topic discussion about Elon Musk's projects and a notable financial transaction
[0.00 --> 8.42] Since our last episode, I have been just every single night building something new, trying something new for my home server setup.
[8.42 --> 12.52] I feel like I've really rebounded from the death of my Raspberry Pi.
[13.08 --> 15.76] And now I'm just like trying out different setups.
[15.92 --> 21.16] I'm really just going out, having fun, living life, experiencing different things.
[21.30 --> 24.78] I'm not getting committed to any serious configurations or setups.
[24.98 --> 29.10] I'm just dabbling and experimenting and really enjoying myself.
[29.10 --> 32.38] But sowing your seed in the field of Linux, I take it.
[33.26 --> 33.66] Absolutely.
[34.06 --> 36.54] And things were just going really great.
[38.22 --> 39.22] Until last night.
[39.50 --> 40.06] Uh-oh.
[40.36 --> 41.22] But we'll get to that.
[41.28 --> 42.14] We'll get to that in the show.
[42.22 --> 45.44] There's so much to get into today that I want to save it for a little bit.
[45.56 --> 47.58] Because I know you've been at an event recently.
[48.08 --> 56.14] We also have been thinking about doing a little shout out to the community, trying to get somebody who might be a Discord bot wizard to help us come up with a title bot for the show.
[56.52 --> 57.98] So there's a lot to cover today.
[57.98 --> 61.92] Plus, towards the end of the show, we've got some great feedback, some good questions.
[62.14 --> 63.94] I've got some new hardware updates.
[64.70 --> 66.10] So I'll tell you about it later, okay?
[66.66 --> 68.02] Oh, it's such a tease.
[68.32 --> 71.08] I think I'll stick around and see what's been happening.
[71.26 --> 72.54] Stay tuned and find out, Alex.
[73.20 --> 73.60] Exactly.
[73.60 --> 76.94] Well, very quickly, let's just cover the title bot first, shall we?
[77.62 --> 78.82] Very simple requirements.
[78.94 --> 83.88] We want something that you type, you know, bang, you know, exclamation mark, start show.
[84.22 --> 85.90] And that starts the timer running.
[85.90 --> 94.24] And then ideally publishes any bang suggest titles to a little web page, which we can rank by the number of votes.
[94.58 --> 95.44] Yeah, an upvote or something.
[96.44 --> 99.64] If you've been with JB for a while, you remember jbtitles.com.
[99.92 --> 106.92] Something like that that we used to have in IRC, but for the modern age in Discord would be bang tidy.
[106.92 --> 111.96] Yeah, because we've been live streaming now for weeks over at jupyter.tube every other Wednesday.
[112.34 --> 113.66] And we put our Discord up there.
[114.28 --> 116.62] We've got a live chat room in our Discord.
[117.58 --> 123.70] And the thing is, we've been podcasting for so long, our title-making happeners are broken.
[124.20 --> 125.92] And we just cannot title these things.
[125.96 --> 127.30] So we need to crowdsource that.
[127.66 --> 130.04] And it gives people a chance to participate live and come up with a title.
[130.14 --> 131.98] If you want to help us build a bot, reach out and let us know.
[132.16 --> 136.24] Yeah, if it was up to me, every episode would be called Linux and stuff.
[136.92 --> 140.24] We can do our buddy Joe's approach and just drop titles altogether.
[140.74 --> 142.64] He convinced me to do that with Linux Action News.
[143.14 --> 143.80] Best thing ever.
[144.18 --> 147.00] Yeah, well, news is kind of, yeah, it's different.
[147.64 --> 148.22] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[148.60 --> 149.88] All right, so I'm a little jelly.
[150.30 --> 152.04] You've been at all things open today.
[152.28 --> 154.42] I have, right on my doorstep.
[154.60 --> 160.04] A great big open source, 4,000, 5,000 person open source conference right on my doorstep.
[160.58 --> 162.10] 4,000 to 5,000?
[162.44 --> 163.74] Yeah, that's what I've been told, yeah.
[163.74 --> 163.78] Yeah.
[164.32 --> 167.38] I kind of almost feel like maybe this is the new Linux Fest.
[167.88 --> 168.40] Am I right?
[168.54 --> 169.60] Is it worth going to?
[169.68 --> 170.74] Should I travel to this?
[170.82 --> 171.40] Give me your take.