cover of episode 354: Interview with Frank Karlitschek of Nextcloud

354: Interview with Frank Karlitschek of Nextcloud

2024/1/5
logo of podcast Destination Linux

Destination Linux

Shownotes Transcript

https://youtu.be/wShIu0oE4f0)

On this episode of Destination Linux (354), Frank Karlitschek of Nextcloud joins us for an interview at the Ubuntu Summit to discuss Nextcloud, the importance of self-hosting, Open Source, KDE, and more.

Download as MP3)

Special Guest:

Frank Karlitschek Link: https://nextcloud.com)

Supported by:

Namecheap = https://destinationlinux.net/namecheap) LINBIT = https://destinationlinux.net/linbit)

Hosted by:

Michael Tunnell = https://michaeltunnell.com) Ryan (DasGeek) = https://dasgeekcommunity.com) Jill Bryant = https://jilllinuxgirl.com)

Want to Support the Show?

Become a Patron = https://tuxdigital.com/membership) Store = https://tuxdigital.com/store)

Chapters:

00:00 Destination Linux 354 Intro 00:26 Community Feedback 04:20 NAMECHEAP - [ link) ] 05:18 Interview Frank Karlitschek from Nextcloud 30:47 LINBIT - [ link) ] 32:05 Gaming: Cosmic Carnage Prologue - [ link) ] 35:44 Software Spotlight: Impression - [ link) ] 37:04 Tips and Tricks: Community Feedback 40:31 Events 42:04 Outro

Tip of the Week

apropos -s 1 “” | shuf -n 1

Full Message:

"Hello everyone! love the show. Been a Linux user for a little bit now and I get lots of tips and tricks from you guys. I wanted to share a trick I recently started using to learn commands/tools/stuff. There are so many commands and functions that I would feel overwhelmed learning about them. I came across the apropos command using the -s 1 “” when using that options you will see tons of output and their definitions. This is where your anxiety starts. BUT if you pipe that into the shuf command followed by -n 1 it will output one random command with the brief definition. The full command would be apropos -s 1 “” | shuf -n 1 I then put this in my bashrc start up so when I log into the system it will output one of those random commands. I will then take that one output and make it my mission to know everything I can about it by the end of the day. (if its something I already know, I will run the command until I see something new) Hope someone finds this helpful. Keep marching!"