An open show powered by community LINUX Unplugged takes the best attributes of open collaboration an
Deploying Nextcloud the Nix way promises a paradise of reproducibility and simplicity. But is it jus
Some uncomfortable truths about using Linux, and then we introduce a new segment: Will it Nix?Sponso
Data-hoard with purpose and manage your audiobooks and podcasts with one application, plus the lone
Trying NixOS can be fraught with complexity, half-completed guides, and boring videos. Even if you n
Kent Overstreet, the creator of bcachefs, helps us understand where his new filesystem fits, what it
This challenge gets ugly as we slowly realize we've just become zombie slayers. We load Linux
We make our big Linux predictions for 2024, but first, we score how we did for 2023.Special Guest: M
It’s the fourth annual Unplugged Tuxies; our community votes on the best projects, distros, and desk
The stories that kept us talking all year, and are only getting hotter! Plus the big flops we'r
We test two popular methods to run local language models on your Linux box. Then, we push the limits
This week, our embarrassment is your entertainment. Then, we check the age and health of all our dis
PipeWire hits 1.0, and Wim Taymans joins us to reflect on the smooth success of PipeWire. Plus the d
Can we save an old Arch install? We'll attempt a live rescue, then get into our tips for keeping
The problem with GNOME's great news, plus our first look at Plasma 6. Then, the surprising place
A special guest joins us, and we each give Fedora 39 a try. What’s new, what we liked, and what didn
We did Proxmox dirty last week, so we try to explain our thinking. But first, a few things have gone
We try and pull off one too many projects, but you can't argue with the results. We report on ou
Has Canonical finally nailed snaps? Why it looks like Ubuntu has turned a new corner; our thoughts o
We ran Windows for the week with three seemingly simple objectives. How we did, our take on what'
Why the Raspberry Pi 5 doesn't meet our expectations, and the x86 boxes you should consider inst