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#linuxunplugged — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #linuxunplugged, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Mi año 2025 en pódcasts. #AntennaPodEcho

    ​1. Linux Unplugged #LinuxUnplugged @ChrisLAS
    (Se nota que me suscribí este año)

    2. Bala extra @elojoqueves

    3. Podnews Weekly Review @samsethi + @james

    4. Los Últimos de Feedlipinas @ultimosfeed = @jeanbedel + @Mujeresconhistoria + @verdugo789 + @ruisan

    5. Podcasting 2.0 @dave + @adam

  2. I recently quite often listened to the Linux Unplugged podcast as an addition to the german Linux podcast i normally consume.
    From the monetization pov thats really next level and i dont know if like that. Its packed with ads and a quarter of each episode is about who has paid how many using some kind of blockchain bullshit crypto currency.
    Yep it is really different from central europe linux podcasts.

    And then there is always an ad for Crowdhealth, which sounds for my like universal healthcare but privately run, because when state does that (like in Germany) its socialism.
    #linuxunplugged #crowdhealth

  3. #LinuxUnplugged Episode 636: Engineering The Future

    I was fortunate enough to join @ChrisLAS
    and company the other night to talk about #Ubuntu 25.10 and our new release process!

    linuxunplugged.com/636

  4. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  5. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  6. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  7. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  8. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  9. @dylancode I hear the guys on #linuxunplugged talking about Nix literally all the time, and that makes me want to like it, because I like those guys and I like the show. Then I get to reading about it and I'm like "err, screw that."

    I used Arch for a long time. Back in the day before flatpaks, the AUR opened up paths to software for me that I otherwise didn't have, or it made that access a lot easier. Just maintaining it got to be a chore, so I eventually drifted away. I still have fond memories of it though.

    My absolute favorite distro is Debian. I mean, at least in theory. I don't use it anymore because I like having more recent software, and I freaking loath going through all the motions to make it livable for me these days. I still get the warm fuzzies when I see a Debian swirl though :D

  10. @abosio

    I could buy this if #TailScale was being promoted on, say, #LinuxUnplugged. On a show specifically about self hosting though, promoting something that runs everyone's logins through #Google/#Microsoft/#Apple is hypocritical.

    #OIDC is at least self-hostable, but setting that up wipes out the main claimed benefit, namely that it will be up and running "within minutes". So they're making claims on a show literally called "SelfHosting" that are only met by using #GAFAM accounts.

    #Privacy

  11. The Tuxies voting is closing in the next few days. If the number of voters is below the 2,000 cutoff, this will be the last one. So use your right to vote for your favorite Linux applications and projects.

    tuxies.party

    #Linux #Tuxies #LinuxUnplugged #KDE #Ubuntu #Gnome #Arch #Neovim #Fedora #JupiterBroadcasting

  12. My project url-to-png was just talked about on the linux unplugged podcast (which I listen to most weeks) and I'm super stoked about it!

    #linuxunplugged #selfhostedshow #selfhosted

    github.com/jasonraimondi/url-t
    linuxunplugged.com/562

  13. @ChrisLAS and the #jupiterbroadcasting crew on #Linuxunplugged did a great job promoting #OSS and #podcasting2. Thanks man! !! As a long time #Linux and #oss open source software promoter myself, it's so damn cool seeing it come together. Now @adam @Johncdvorak brag about #Linux

    Shared via @AntennaPod A1 player.

    All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows: The Next Gen Desktop | LINUX Unplugged 509
    Starting from: 00:31:23

    Episode webpage: feed.jupiter.zone/allshows#ent

    Media file: feed.jupiter.zone/link/19057/1