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Late Night Linux

Late Night Linux is a podcast that takes a look at what’s happening with Linux and the wider tech in

Episodes

Total: 342

It’s our 200th episode spectacular! We look back over some of the key events and trends from t

Tracking planes that don’t necessarily want to be tracked, the catch 22 of communicating chang

Stadia is finally dead, Valve has shipped a million Steam Decks, Canonical tries to win back the com

Loads of discoveries including quickly fixing command line flubs, a must-have tool for USB booting,

systemd arrives on WSL, Audacity gains a huge feature, Mozilla makes (valid) excuses, a bumper KDE K

Whether images created by AI count as art, self-hosted audio streaming, a hex editor, playing Steam

Huge wins for RISC-V and Ubuntu Unity, the changing ways that software is distributed, and a sad lam

A great FOSS text to speech engine, taking ownership of your audiobooks, and making chiptune music.

We catch up on a month’s worth of news including GitHub and GitLab controversies, Arduino mult

Playing with Arduinos, a 1337 h4x0r tool, ChromeOS Flex, a proprietary software win, whether open-so

It’s the London meetup live show special! Joe is joined by Alex and Gary to discuss how to acc

Loads of useful discoveries, a Lineage tale of woe, yet more trolling of Félim, and more.   Dis

Torvalds is using an Arm Mac with Asahi, potentially bad news for ChromeOS in Europe, a remarkable D

Graham played with a Steam Deck, Will switched to Firefox, Félim cleaned up his home directory, and

Thinkpads that won’t boot Linux by default, Lennart moves to Microsoft, the Firefox Snap is fi

A modern alternative to the watch command, automating lights, and hacking routers, using FOSS to mak

The community gets angry about GitHub Copilot, Félim gets angry about email, Firefox continues to im

Will buys a cheap mouse, Félim thinks he’s a meteorologist, Graham hacks his TV, and Joe compl

Thumbs up for Mozilla and KDE, mixed reaction to mobile Thunderbird and Microsoft, AI definitely isn

Arch is really easy to install now, Graham uses his keyboard as a mouse, replacing expensive securit