𝕿𝖊𝖈𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍𝖙𝖘 Bulletin for Thursday, November 04, 2021 ┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅┅ Generated Fri 5 Nov 02:40:15 GMT 2021 Created by Dr. Roy Schestowitz (𝚛𝚘𝚢 (at) 𝚜𝚌𝚑𝚎𝚜𝚝𝚘𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚣 (dot) 𝚌𝚘𝚖) Full hyperlinks for navigation omitted but are fully available in the originals The corresponding HTML versions are at 𝒕𝒆𝒄𝒉𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔.𝒐𝒓𝒈 Latest in 𝒉𝒕𝒕𝒑://𝒕𝒆𝒄𝒉𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔.𝒐𝒓𝒈/𝒕𝒙𝒕 and older bulletins can be found at 𝒉𝒕𝒕𝒑://𝒕𝒆𝒄𝒉𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔.𝒐𝒓𝒈/𝒕𝒙𝒕-𝒂𝒓𝒄𝒉𝒊𝒗𝒆𝒔 Full IPFS index in 𝒉𝒕𝒕𝒑://𝒕𝒆𝒄𝒉𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔.𝒐𝒓𝒈/𝒊𝒑𝒇𝒔 and as plain text in 𝒉𝒕𝒕𝒑://𝒕𝒆𝒄𝒉𝒓𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕𝒔.𝒐𝒓𝒈/𝒊𝒑𝒇𝒔/𝒕𝒙𝒕 Gemini index for the day: gemini://gemini.techrights.org/2021/11/04/ ╒═══════════════════ 𝐑𝐄𝐂𝐄𝐍𝐓 𝐁𝐔𝐋𝐋𝐄𝐓𝐈𝐍𝐒 ════════════════════════════════════╕ Previous bulletins in IPFS (past 21 days, in chronological order): QmSJxiMQEysAS6b1cT6LbxyB2gmL92RHnKe2bugqURX7jK QmZ9XrCCvCG4m4kD1sxmesDGxEpk9EjEVk5vNUFHZ87Ryw QmZQbFL87wWvs9kFDSndgbof4kDmQTqYdyokNAjNg8H7Ca QmSfTwYRE2mM7875hHQK9fmXEAAZS4i3r9frAmfJcCFGks QmWq5A18omXMGWTTDzH6NZwrkQWd1pUiLRptBpgDHHhvXq QmVR1Se3jKzW513QvSLv9utzGvBbi5C3cdSBwWspCid4vi Qme5Me7St6kgikNpzT1KeDRhhmCJJtsLSFQyP8TDyvd8MW QmagsjCozdhV3doZKjmRs6GYXQb7U425VW5GsX4YUfg2Fu QmXdXQ45MDdfyLhvFXMoFQarrFy2cSYrkTKdKtneXpHrYF QmNooKJgn2ZLXZJyZNJCACY5R84RsQy1y85ycxgS8JMkdA QmcbJ2ejJ9JqECW5WmJC4LeEqkjC7w6kcJ6wjwLthVmoEU QmR26bCkmAgeJHsLEpDDduxsZtvTiPxLdppYuH4w8mzfdo Qmex86DPLV4yK5WC34kReVXbdEtRT7fvt7mBVzMTGbSCct QmUF9ey4dzyvtaKZQVc5QTVyN1uh5C8nqhzm5bDtAjMpUH QmQQsCU87GH58r3ULuJPn4a3DUUCqjRgtvTnrTgEzE32uB QmXo7j8hPUpwapnbFNNyHpSzJw8jxwrfGCZfVzhG6m46Fc QmWRUGR4iW5rnmLQnw9FgqKFSzKTya3pneRJvmK2VknwKJ QmRj8aGQBLtRqtiYJQreD9xtEMzqDcpaLPjFYLoe48xgQ5 QmceuRQeatSitbW6vADhod8yMXLWphJhT1uYZmcy4rjm6f QmewryoNvgmB7zLqV7RQ2PTLYkagYXvBASicFQi1ESPiHm QmViJLHdiRf7wrstUaHcTaXuiWpGyTkptFkDjYAFoJBJoj ╒═══════════════════ 𝐈𝐍𝐃𝐄𝐗 ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════╕ ⦿ The Beginning of the End of the GitHub Near-Monopoly and Its Demise to CodePlex Status (a Slow-Motion Train Wreck) | Techrights ䷼ Bulletin articles (as HTML) to comment on (requires login): http://techrights.org/2021/11/04/github-beginning-of-the-end/#comments ䷞ Followed by Daily Links (assorted news picks curated and categorised): http://techrights.org/2021/11/04/mesa-21-3-rc4/#comments http://techrights.org/2021/11/04/voyager-linux-21-10/#comments ䷩ 𝚕𝚒𝚗𝚎 48 ╒═══════════════════ 𝐀𝐑𝐓𝐈𝐂𝐋𝐄 ═════════════════════════════════════════════════╕ (ℹ) Images, hyperlinks and comments at http://techrights.org/2021/11/04/github-beginning-of-the-end/#comments Gemini version at gemini://gemini.techrights.org/2021/11/04/github-beginning-of-the-end/ ⠀⌧ █▇▆▅▄▃▂▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 11.04.21⠀▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█ ⌧ Gemini_version_available_♊︎ ✐ The_Beginning_of_the_End_of_the_GitHub_Near-Monopoly_and_Its_Demise_to CodePlex_Status_(a_Slow-Motion_Train_Wreck)⠀✐ Posted in Deception, Microsoft at 1:11 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz Video_download_link | md5sum 9e7949eb6615f0a098ec780efbb70f49 http://techrights.org/videos/goodbye-github.webm Summary: A quick statement by video (spontaneous and unscripted) about how we’ll be covering GitHub scandals following the_departure_of_one_mastermind among_several WE HAVE ALREADY MADE many videos that explain what’s wrong with GitHub and what to use instead. But in the current series, which we’ve published 4 parts of [1, 2, 3, 4], there’s a lot more than that. We expect about 20 parts in total, then a discussion and recommendations (various alternatives). The video above doesn’t mention future details, only stuff hitherto disclosed already (parts 1- 4). Nothing that Microsoft tried with CodePlex worked (not even when the Linux Foundation helped and Miguel_de_Icaza entered as if he was a superstar), so in 2014_they_planned_to_buy_the_'market_leader'_(among_code_forges). They then eyed it like a submarine for 4 whole years. The following_year_it_already suffered (the Microsoft stench always leads to this) and it_still_wasn't profitable. Expect the demise of GitHub to accelerate even further. They have no solid plan. Our plan remains unchanged and the publication pace the same (one part a week, typically on Mondays), but the framing will be slightly different because Friedman leaves in a couple of weeks. He was most likely forced to “resign”. He had_it_coming. █ ䷩ 𝚕𝚒𝚗𝚎 106 ╒═══════════════════ 𝐃𝐀𝐈𝐋𝐘 𝐋𝐈𝐍𝐊𝐒 ═════════════════════════════════════════════╕ ⠀⌧ █▇▆▅▄▃▂▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 11.04.21⠀▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█ ⌧ Gemini_version_available_♊︎ ✐ Links_4/11/2021:_LibreOffice_7.1.7_and_Mesa_21.3_RC4_Released⠀✐ Posted in News_Roundup at 3:07 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz 🄸🄼🄰🄶🄴 🄳🄴🅂🄲🅁🄸🄿🅃🄸🄾🄽 ⦇GNOME bluefish⦈ § Contents⠀➾ * GNU/Linux o Distributions o Devices/Embedded * Free_Software/Open_Source * Leftovers * § GNU/Linux⠀➾ o ⚓ Hunting_for_Kernel_Glitches,_DevSec_Tools,_Edge_for_Linux,_More Ubuntu_Outlets⠀⇛ Today LinuxInsider introduces a bimonthly news column to summarize some of the Linux and open-source consumer and enterprise events scattered around the Linux Sphere. Look forward to an assortment of topics that will keep Linux users and open-source supporters up to speed with new developments. We will cover items of interest for Linux desktop users, distro hoppers, software developers, and — well anyone considering a migration to the Linux computing platform. o § Desktop/Laptop⠀➾ # ⚓ Tuxedo_Nano_Pro_Gen_11_is_a_compact_Linux_desktop_with_AMD Ryzen_4000U⠀⇛ The Tuxedo Nano Pro Gen 11 is a mini PC that measures 4.6″ x 4.3″ x 1.9″ and ships with a choice of Ubuntu Linux or the Ubuntu-based Tuxedo_OS. It’s the latest in a line of Linux PCs from Tuxedo Computers, and the company says the little desktop is one of the smallest available with an AMD Ryzen 4000U processor. It’s available from Tuxedo for 640 Euros and up, taxes included. # ⚓ TUXEDO’s_Nano_Pro_is_a_Palm-Sized_Linux_PC⠀⇛ The TUXEDO Nano Pro (Gen 11) is a palm-sized computer that measures a mere a 110x118x48mm. Despite the petite proportions the device packs in powerful AMD Ryzen 4000U series processors, and has enough room for 2 RAM modules (up to 64GB) and 2 storage slots (1x M.2 and 1x 2.5-inch). Basically this thing is a tech TARDIS. Three processor choices are available: a quad-core AMD Ryzen 3 4300U; a 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 4500U; and an octa-core AMD Ryzen 7 4800U. # ⚓ TUXEDO_Nano_Pro_Gen11_Dubbed_as_the_Smallest_Mini_Linux_PC Powered_by_AMD_Ryzen_4000U⠀⇛ Meet the 11th-generation of the TUXEDO Nano Pro palm-sized mini computer featuring AMD’s highly efficient Ryzen 4000U CPU series, namely the AMD Ryzen 3 4300U, AMD Ryzen 5 4500U, and AMD Ryzen 7 4800U, all with integrated AMD Radeon graphics. The tiny PC also features two exchangeable SO-DIMM RAM slots for up to 64 GB RAM, as well as two M.2 SSD slots with PCIe 3.0 x4 or SATA3 connection for up to 10TB of storage. # ⚓ The_TUXEDO_Nano_Pro_is_a_powerhouse_in_a_tiny_box⠀⇛ Looking for something small yet mighty? The TUXEDO Nano Pro was just announced and not only is it tiny, it seems like it will pack quite the performance punch with AMD Ryzen. Officially labelled as the “TUXEDO Nano Pro: The Nano Pro – Gen11″, they say it’s “the perfect digital signage solution for digital media content in advertising and information systems as well as a home media station for the living room or an ultra mobile home or work PC”. Smaller than a shoebox, diagonally about the size of a standard pen – it really is quite small (110 x 118 x 48 mm). o § Server⠀➾ # ⚓ Most_Reliable_Hosting_Company_Sites_in_October_2021 [Ed: One instance of FreeBSD repepears; it was only GNU/Linux for a while]⠀⇛ Rackspace had the most reliable hosting company site in October 2021, with an average connection time of 8ms and no failed requests. So far in 2021, Rackspace has appeared in the top 10 every month, with four appearances in first place. Rackspace provides a wide variety of cloud services from its global network of over 50 locations across five continents. In second place, CWCS Managed Hosting also responded to each of Netcraft’s requests in October, with an average connection time of 62ms. CWCS provides dedicated servers and cloud services with data centres across the UK and North America. The top five is completed by Choopa.com, Bigstep and Swishmail whose sites each responded to the same number of requests and were separated by average connection time. Choopa.com had the fastest average connection time of just 3ms. Choopa.com offers a range of services including cloud hosting, dedicated hosting and colocation with its own primary facility in Piscataway, New Jersey and other facilities in Los Angeles, Amsterdam, and Tokyo. Colocation from Choopa.com is available in the US, Amsterdam and London. o § Audiocasts/Shows⠀➾ # ⚓ The_Linux_Link_Tech_Show_Episode_929⠀⇛ pi stuff, cooking, home made soda # ⚓ BSDNow_427:_Logging_is_important⠀⇛ Build Your FreeBSD Developer Workstation, logging is important, how BSD authentication works, pfSense turns 15 years old, OPNsense Business Edition 21.10 released, getting started with pot, and more o § Kernel Space⠀➾ # ⚓ Linux_x86_Program_Start_Up⠀⇛ This is for people who want to understand how programs get loaded under linux. In particular it talks about dynamically loaded x86 ELF files. The information you learn will let you understand how to debug problems that occur in your program before main starts up. Everything I tell you is true, but some things will be glossed over since they don’t take us toward our goal. Further, if you link statically, some of the details will be different. I won’t cover that at all. By the time you’re done with this though, you’ll know enough to figure that out for yourself if you need to. # ⚓ Linux_5.16_Arm_SoC_Changes_Bring-Up_The_Snapdragon_690, Other_Hardware⠀⇛ All of the Arm SoC/platform changes were merged on Wednesday evening for the Linux 5.16 kernel cycle. It’s another busy cycle bringing up more Arm platforms with the mainline Linux kernel with multiple new SoCs and boards enabled. Some of the highlights of this work for Linux 5.16 are listed below. # § Graphics Stack⠀➾ # ⚓ XWayland_Lands_Another_Performance_Fix_–_Phoronix⠀⇛ Red Hat engineer Michel Dänzer has uncovered and addressed another performance shortcoming within X.Org’s XWayland code. While our (X)Wayland Linux gaming testing has shown GNOME and KDE to be in good shape with the Wayland session versus X.Org performance, there are more optimizations still that can be made. # ⚓ mesa_21.3.0-rc4⠀⇛ Hello everyone, The fourth release candidate is now available, containing once again an overwhelming majority of zink fixes, and a handful of patches for everything else. Note that while this could have been the final release of 21.3.0, there are a number of blocking issues still left, so we're having another round of release candidate. We'll see how things look in a week. Please test it and report any issue here: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/ issues/new Issues that should block the release of 21.3.0 should be added to the corresponding milestone: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/ milestones/27 Cheers, Eric # ⚓ Mesa_21.3-rc4_Release_Led_By_Many_Zink_Fixes_– Phoronix⠀⇛ Mesa 21.3 as the final feature release for this collection of open-source OpenGL and Vulkan drivers isn’t yet ready to go as some blocker bugs persist, but available now is the fourth weekly release candidate. Blocking Mesa 21.3 still are regressions affecting various dEQP failures, a regression breaking builds for all non-Linux platforms like macOS / BSDs / Solaris / Haiku / Cygwin / Hurd, Piglit test failures, and a rendering issue with Tomb Raider paired with RadeonSI Gallium3D. o § Benchmarks⠀➾ # ⚓ Intel_Core_i5_12600K_/_Core_i9_12900K_“Alder_Lake”_Linux Performance⠀⇛ With the Intel 12th Gen Core processors shipping today along with the new line-up of Z690 motherboards, the review embargo lifts for talking about these Intel “Alder Lake” processors. While by now you’ve likely heard a lot about Intel Alder Lake on Windows and various leaked benchmarks with Windows 11, how does these processors with the new hybrid architecture work and perform on Linux? Here are the initial benchmarks and support information for Intel’s Core i5 12600K and Core i9 12900K processors under Ubuntu Linux. o § Applications⠀➾ # ⚓ Stargate,_New_Open-Source_Digital_Audio_Station_for_Linux⠀⇛ Ardor usually takes center stage when it comes to open-source digital audio stations (DAW), however, that does not mean that it is the only option, so we are going to take the opportunity to present Stargate , another application the same type of recent creation (more or less) that aims to be “a comprehensive audio production solution, with everything you need to make music on a computer .“ [...] Stargate also has, according to the features published in its GitHub repository, a powerful track routing matrix with lateral chaining and a modular mixer architecture. In theory, it works on Linux, Windows and macOS covering x86 and ARM processors, but for now the latest version of the application only has installers for Linux on ARM and x86 and Windows on x86. It is programmed in C and PyQt mainly and has been designed and developed in such a way that it is easy to port to other platforms. o § Instructionals/Technical⠀➾ # ⚓ How_to_install_Mongodb_5_in_Opensuse_Leap_15.3_–_Citizix⠀⇛ In this guide we are going to learn how to install MongoDB 5.0 Community Edition on an OpenSUSE Leap 15.3 server. MongoDB is a cross-platform document-oriented NoSQL database program that uses JSON-like documents with optional schemas. MongoDB is developed by MongoDB Inc. and licensed under the Server Side Public License. # ⚓ Date_format_suitable_for_file_names_|_Adam_Young’s_Web Log⠀⇛ It is rare that you want to write something without later wanting to be able to read it back. One common way of organizing files that are generated regularly is by time stamp. If you want to add a timestamp to a file name, you can do so using the date command. # ⚓ Make_long_running_tasks_short_for_development_|_Adam Young’s_Web_Log⠀⇛ COmpiling the Linux Kernel is a long running task. Oh, sure, you can put -j 32 and it speeds it up tremendously. But it still is a long running task. And by that, I mean it fits the following definition: # ⚓ What_is_Aggregation_in_MongoDB_with_example⠀⇛ Database Management Systems have some common operations that are supported by SQL and NoSQL databases as well. The aggregation operation is one of them and is backed by several relational and non-relational databases. MongoDB is one of those databases that have the support of this operation. Aggregation is a key operation in any database that allows you to process data records to get targeted results. With the help of aggregation, the users can combine several entities to form a single meaningful entity by grouping the data. The aggregation operations consist of several expressions that help to group the data for a meaningful output. For instance, a laptop, mobiles, gadgets can be combined under a single entity, let’s say technology_store. The entities are combined when individual entities do not represent anything or have no meaning. This article provides a deep insight into the aggregate method and the expressions supported by this method. # ⚓ What_is_datediff_in_MySQL⠀⇛ MySQL is one of the most popular databases in the world. Regardless of the industry, MySQL is widely adopted for its features. It’s an open-source RDBMS (Relational Database Management System). Data are organized into tables that can be related to each other. It incorporates SQL to perform various database actions. In this guide, we’ll check out one such function. It will demonstrate how to use the DATEDIFF function in MySQL. # ⚓ What_is_insertOne_method_in_MongoDB⠀⇛ MongoDB is a NoSQL database that performs the fundamental operations that a DBMS(Database Management System) can perform. There are several methods and functions supported by MongoDB that are exercised for the insertion process. The insertOne () belongs to the insertion methods and this method is practiced to insert one document in the MongoDB collection. The insertOne() method also creates a collection, if it does not exist. MongoDB stores data in a document form and these documents are kept inside a collection. The primary purpose of the insertOne method is to add a document in a MongoDB collection; however, if the collection does not exist then this method also creates the collection as well. Following the importance of this method, our today’s guide is focused on demonstrating the use of the insertOne method in MongoDB: # ⚓ What_are_SQLite_foreign_keys⠀⇛ SQLite is an open-source RDBMS (relational database management system), which manages the data in tables. The tables used in databases can have relationships with each other, to establish this relationship, foreign keys are used. Foreign keys tell which table is connected to which table. The relationships between the tables are the key feature of relational databases, which is being represented by foreign and primary keys. In this article, we will explain the foreign keys and their working in SQLite. # ⚓ What_are_date_and_time_types_and_functions_in_SQLite⠀⇛ SQLite is a relational database management system (RDMS), which has a very simple architecture because it has no server and it stores data on the operating system of the local machine in which it is operating. SQLite supports different functions of Date and Time which can help to manage date and time accordingly. Every database management system either has DateTime data types, functions, or both. In this write-up, we will discuss the DateTime data type and function in detail with the help of examples. # ⚓ How_To_Install_Darkstat_on_Ubuntu_20.04_LTS_–_idroot⠀⇛ In this tutorial, we will show you how to install Darkstat on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. For those of you who didn’t know, Darkstat is a cross-platform, lightweight, simple, real-time network statistics tool that captures network traffic, computes statistics concerning usage, and serves the reports over HTTP. Darkstat supports IPv6 protocol and asynchronous reverse DNS resolution. This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of Linux, know how to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own VPS. The installation is quite simple and assumes you are running in the root account, if not you may need to add ‘sudo‘ to the commands to get root privileges. I will show you the step-by-step installation of Darkstat web-based Linux network traffic analyzer on Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal Fossa). You can follow the same instructions for Ubuntu 18.04, 16.04, and any other Debian-based distribution like Linux Mint. # ⚓ How_To_Format_Storage_Drive_for_UEFI-GPT_System Installation⠀⇛ This simple tutorial will explain how you can prepare a hard disk or a USB flash drive with GUID Partition Table (GPT) technology for the purpose of operating system installation on UEFI computer. You can read this before installing a GNU/Linux distribution to your modern PC and laptop. Good luck! # ⚓ How_To_Install_MAAS_on_Ubuntu_20.04_LTS_–_idroot⠀⇛ In this tutorial, we will show you how to install MAAS on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. For those of you who didn’t know, MAAS (Metal as a Service) offers cloud style provisioning for physical servers. It is open source and free to use, with commercial support available from Canonical. This tool is very useful for normal enterprises in managing virtualized infrastructure. MAAS is supported on Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows, and RedHat operating systems. This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of Linux, know how to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own VPS. The installation is quite simple and assumes you are running in the root account, if not you may need to add ‘sudo‘ to the commands to get root privileges. I will show you the step-by-step installation of MAAS on Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal Fossa). You can follow the same instructions for Ubuntu 18.04, 16.04, and any other Debian-based distribution like Linux Mint. # ⚓ Search_Gitlab_For_Sensitive_Data_and_Credentials_using GitLab_Watchman_–_blackMORE_Ops⠀⇛ GitLab Watchman is an application that uses the GitLab API to Search GitLab for sensitive data and credentials exposed internally – this includes code, commits, wiki pages and more. # ⚓ How_to_Install_Xibo_CMS_on_Ubuntu_20.04⠀⇛ Xibo is open-source digital signage (public display signs) solution that is comprised of a web-based content management system (CMS). The best way to capture the attention of people for your very important announcements can be done with digital signs using Xibo. It lets us turn PCs and TVs into a distinctive way of getting the word out, transforming them into information desks that you can place in strategic locations to draw people’s attention. Using Xibo, you can set up your own digital signage server that can push out images, video, and even PowerPoint presentations to kiosks automatically, allowing you to keep your entire organization up to date on your latest news without resorting to mass e-mailings or having to hand-edit files or slideshows on multiple machines. Xibo can be run through Docker or on a web server with MySQL/PHP installed. In this tutorial, we learn how to install Xibo CMS with Docker on Ubuntu 20.04. # ⚓ How_To_Manage_Open-Source_Software⠀⇛ Open-source software includes code that’s available publicly. As a result, the software can be shared and used for a wide range of reasons. One of the biggest reasons why developers use open-source code is because it helps them to build and deploy applications faster. Organizations are demanding more and more from developers, and they’re coming under pressure to create applications faster. Open-source software makes this possible. Most software applications now include open-source components. # ⚓ How_to_install_Python_Django_in_Ubuntu_21.10_– NextGenTips⠀⇛ Django is Python-based free and open source web framework that allows model-template-view architectural patterns. Django encourages rapid development and clean and pragmatic codes. It takes care of much of the hassle of web development so that you can focus on the code without reinventing the wheel. # ⚓ How_to_run_a_Golang_Revel_App_with_Docker_and_Docker Compose⠀⇛ In this guide we are going to learn how to run a golang revel app using docker and docker-compose. Golang revel is a high productivity, full-stack web framework for the Go language. Checkout the code used here in this github repo here. # ⚓ How_to_update_a_Linux_symlink_|_Opensource.com⠀⇛ UNIX and Linux users find many uses for links, particularly symbolic links. One way that I like to use symbolic links is to manage configuration backups of various IT equipment. I have a directory structure to hold everything related to documentation, updates, and other files for the computers and devices on my network. Devices can include routers, access points, NAS servers, and laptops, often of different brands and versions. The configuration backups themselves might be deep within the directory tree, e.g. / home/alan/Documents/network/device/NetgearRL5000/ config. # ⚓ Reconfiguring_virtual_machines_with_Cockpit⠀⇛ A virtual machine is created under certain assumptions about required memory, data storage, processing capacity, and so on. All too often, these assumptions need to be adjusted based on actual use practices, and additional configuration work by system administrator is required. Cockpit greatly simplifies and facilitates this work, especially for the Fedora Server editions, that themselves do not include a graphical interface. # ⚓ Pulseaudio_Unix_Domain_Socket_works_in_container⠀⇛ o § Games⠀➾ # ⚓ Godot_Engine_–_Announcing_GoGodotJam_2!⠀⇛ GoGodotJam is a month-long festival ending with a game jam. During the event, you can expect tutorials and interviews with Godot creators on a daily basis. This time, the event is also organizing a fundraiser, aiming to donate 50% of the raised funds to Godot! # ⚓ Bear’s_Restaurant_is_a_touching_game_that_looks_worth_your time_|_GamingOnLinux⠀⇛ Bear’s Restaurant is one we missed from early October. It involves the afterlife, with you landing a job at the afterlife’s coziest eatery. As a waiter at the titular restaurant, players are tasked with diving into the memories of the newly deceased in order to find out what their favourite foods are, and learn the sentimental significance they had in their lives. Players will meet a wide variety of lost souls on their way to the afterlife and will get to witness first-hand how each one lived and died before delivering the last supper that will help them rest in peace. # ⚓ Albion_Online_major_upgrade_‘Lands_Awakened’_arrives November_24_|_GamingOnLinux⠀⇛ Sandbox Interactive has announced that the Lands Awakened upgrade for Albion Online is set for release on November 24. It sounds like it’s going to be pretty big too. Thankfully, this time around it’s not just expanding the PvP available in the game, of which there’s quite a lot already. While it’s a heavy PvP focused game, the team has gradually added more to do outside of that and this update builds upon it. The open-world will be upgraded with new dungeons, mobs, treasure sites, open-world PvP objectives for various group sizes. On top of that you can expect to see “massively” improved visuals and layouts for the different biomes, a new War Gloves weapon line and lots of quality of life adjustments. # ⚓ The_Emergence_of_Cryptocurrency_in_the_Gaming_World_– LinuxLinks⠀⇛ As crypto continues to be a global phenomenon, people worldwide are trying to incorporate this wide-ranging and environment-friendly technology in their industrial products and company services. Innovative methods are being developed to leverage crypto and trade it into gaming by purchasing avatars, gaming products, characters, and various other industries. In the past few decades, video gaming has evolved substantially, achieving a remarkable level. But during the Covid 19 pandemic, when several economies experienced a decline and collapse, the video gaming sector was one of those that showed up an unexpected reverberation. Nationwide lockdowns were imposed, and the people were compelled to stay in their homes. People to seek entertainment played videogames that they get with cheap cd keys, and a massive record was found of users purchasing in-games. With the evolution in PC and mobile gaming, there has been a noticeable increase in the gaming industry’s interest in cryptos. Unquestionably, crypto games are now ruling over the traditional games market as they are allowing their players to earn while playing, thereby illuminating their time and effort. o § Desktop Environments/WMs⠀➾ # § K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt⠀➾ # ⚓ Connect_iPhone_to_Windows_and_Linux_PCs:_KDE_Connect available_as_iOS_beta [Ed: Automated translation]⠀⇛ The connection and remote control tool KDE Connect is now available for iPhones and iPads – for beta testing. KDE Connect iOS is intended to enable interaction between Apple devices as well as Linux and Windows PCs – via the local network. A macOS version of KDE Connect is also in development; it currently has to be compiled by yourself. The Apple systems are already well linked via various handoff functions of the manufacturer. # ⚓ KDE_Gear_21.08.3_–_KDE_Community⠀⇛ Over 120 individual programs plus dozens of programmer libraries and feature plugins are released simultaneously as part of KDE Gear. Today they all get new bugfix source releases with updated translations. Distro and app store packagers should update their application packages. # ⚓ QML-LSP:_A_Simple_LSP_Server_For_QML⠀⇛ note that it doesn’t understand project-local QML components, only stuff installed to the system QML dirs with qmlplugindump set up correctly. regardless, it does a decent job at completing system types, and considering that Qt Creator struggles with some of the plugins that qml-lsp has no problem with, it’s pretty usable and an improvement over the nothing found in editors other than Qt Creator. # ⚓ Qt_Creator_5.0.3_released⠀⇛ We are happy to announce the release of Qt Creator 5.0.3! # ⚓ KDE’s_Butracking_Page_Was_Revamped!_–_Kockatoo_Tube⠀⇛ # § GNOME Desktop/GTK⠀➾ # ⚓ GNOME_40.5_Officially_Released,_Optimizes_Rendering of_Full-Screen_Zoom_and_Fixes_More_Bugs⠀⇛ GNOME 40.5 comes two and a half months after GNOME 40.4 and it was originally scheduled for September 22nd, 2021. It is a stable bugfix release for GNOME 40 and recommended to all distributions shipping the desktop environment in the software repositories. GNOME 40.5 is a small point release compared to previous updates, and it’s here to optimize the rendering of full-screen zoom in GNOME Shell, fix monitor screencast scanouts and middle-click emulation support on X11 in Mutter, as well as to add duplex scanning support for Canon DR-C240 in Simple Scan, which also received better support for Brother scanners. o § Distributions⠀➾ # § SUSE/OpenSUSE⠀➾ # ⚓ Tumbleweed_Snapshots_Glide_Forward⠀⇛ The week prior put together frequent Tumbleweed snapshots and the rolling release has been delivering continuous daily software updates since Oct. 27. Updated documentation for the –whitespace-off feature in urlscan 0.9.7 was made in the latest 20211102 snapshot. Two other packages were also included in the snapshot; both packages were 2.0.99.2 versions of the Chinese input method ibus-sunpinyin and sunpinyin 2.0.99.2. Snapshot 20211101 updated two packages. The general-purpose parser bison updated to version 3.8.2. It removed support for the YYPRINT macro and added a new C++ native GLR parser. The other package to update in the snapshot was gdb 11.1; the debugger added many maintenance scripts and removed several obsolete Fedora patches. The gdb package now supports general memory tagging functionality if the underlying architecture supports the proper primitives and hooks, which is currently only enabled for the AArch64 Memory Tagging Extension. # § IBM/Red Hat/Fedora⠀➾ # ⚓ Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux_9_beta_testing_has_begun⠀⇛ Red Hat has announced the first beta of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 . Ready- to-use installation images have been prepared for registered users of Red Hat Customer Portal ( CentOS Stream 9 iso images can also be used to evaluate functionality ). Package repositories are available without restriction for x86_64, s390x (IBM System z), ppc64le, and Aarch64 (ARM64) architectures. The sources for the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 rpm packages are located in the CentOS Git repository . The release is expected in the first half of next year. In line with a 10- year support cyclethe RHEL 9 distribution will be maintained until 2032. Updates for RHEL 7 will continue to be released until June 30, 2024, and RHEL 8 until May 31, 2029. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 is notable for its move to a more open development process. Unlike previous branches, the CentOS Stream 9 package base was used as the basis for building the distribution.… CentOS Stream is positioned as an upstream project for RHEL, allowing third-party participants to control the preparation of packages for RHEL, propose their changes and influence decisions. Previously, a snapshot of one of the Fedora releases was used as the basis for a new RHEL branch, which was refined and stabilized behind closed doors, without the ability to control the development process and decisions made. Now, based on the Fedora snapshot, with the participation of the community, the CentOS Stream branch is being formed, in which the preparatory work is carried out and the basis for a new significant RHEL branch is formed. # ⚓ The_first_fruits_of_CentOS_Stream:_Red_Hat_Enterprise Linux_9_Beta⠀⇛ This latest look at the future of RHEL is based on the controversial CentOS Stream Linux distribution. While many CentOS users have grumbled about CentOS becoming RHEL’s upstream rather than a Linux distro in its own right, RHEL 9 shows that the new CentOS model has delivered what the company wanted from it. In the meantime, former CentOS users now have RHEL clones Rocky Linux and AlmaLinux or can turn to CloudLinux for CentOS 8 support. But, if you want to know what’s what with RHEL 9 so far, here’s what we know. First, it’s based on Linux kernel 5.14. It will run on four different architectures: Intel/AMD64 (x86_64); ARM 64-bit (aarch64); IBM Power LE (ppc64le); and IBM Z (s390x). And, in case you’ve been, unlike RHEL 8.x, you should be able to run RHEL 9 with Mac M1 processors. # ⚓ Fedora_35_–_Full_Review_–_Invidious⠀⇛ Fedora 35 was released on November 2nd of 2021, and brings with it the latest GNOME experience and various tweaks and improvements. Could this be the best GNOME desktop of 2021 so far? In this review, we’ll take a look at it and see how it stacks up. # ⚓ Remote_hiring:_4_essential_tips_for_leaders_|_The Enterprisers_Project⠀⇛ The paradigm shift to hybrid work and remote work has left nearly every organization rebuilding a key piece of its structure – its culture. Offering a mix of on-site and remote work options has become the expectation of legacy employees and new hires alike, but trying to build a cohesive culture in a digital environment in trying times can lead to change fatigue, frustration, and apathy. # ⚓ Technically_Speaking_series_decodes_DevSecOps⠀⇛ Enterprises are becoming more nimble with DevOps workflows to take advantage of container and cloud technology, which can also lead to an increase in the attack surface of their systems. Monolithic, single- perimeter security approaches don’t work with cybersecurity threats like ransomware and supply chain attacks becoming more common. How can organizations revamp their security approach while continuously deploying applications? Liz Rice, Chief Open Source Officer at Isovalent, has a few thoughts on core DevSecOps technologies that can help address these concerns. She joins Red Hat Chief Technology Officer Chris Wright in “DevSecOps Decoded,” a recent addition to our Technically Speaking series. The series features conversations between Wright and a rotating cast of industry leaders as they chat about what’s on the horizon for technology. Here are some snippets from Wright and Rice’s conversation. # ⚓ Preparing_for_a_Red_Hat_exam:_tips_from_our certification_experts⠀⇛ A Red Hat certification can help administrators, developers, architects, operators, or engineers take the next step in their career or fill skills gaps within their enterprises. What types of questions won’t you find on Red Hat exams? Multiple-choice, check all that apply and matching terminology. It’s no secret that the exams are hard. They’re performance-based, practical exams that are designed to validate IT professionals who want to take on ambitious projects and stay ahead of the technology curve. During the exams, you demonstrate your skills in solving real-world scenarios. To pass, you’re to make your systems and applications work according to the exam objectives, and configurations must persist after reboot without intervention. So how do you start getting ready for a hands-on exam? In a video on redhat.com, Randy Russell, Director of Certification, offers tips to help you prepare, and hopefully pass, your Red Hat certification exam. We’re rounding out his suggestions in this blog post with a few other helpful resources for you to bookmark. # § Debian Family⠀➾ # ⚓ Mike_Gabriel:_Call_for_Translations:_Ayatana Indicators_0.9.x_Release_Series⠀⇛ We (Robert Tari, the UBports developers team, myself) are very close to releasing Ayatana Indicators 0.9.x. The work on Ayatana Indicators is currently nearly completed funded by the UBports Foundation and over the past half year, many many changes, improvements and clean-ups have been added to the code. Ayatana Indicators 0.9.x will be the first release series to be in the development tree of Ubuntu Touch 20.04 (which is currently under very heavy development). o § Devices/Embedded⠀➾ # ⚓ Router_boards_combine_WiFi-6_and_GbE_with_PoE⠀⇛ Wallys unveiled two Linux-driven router SBCs with a 1GHz Qualcomm IPQ6010. The “DR6018 V4” offers WiFi- 6, 5G, 2.5GbE, and 4x GbE, including one with PoE. The “DR6018-S V02” has GbE, GbE with PoE, and WiFi- 6, and also supports the 1.8GHz IPQ6000 and IPQ6018. Wallys (or Wally’s) Communications has delivered two new variations on its DR6018 router board from 2020. Both the DR6018 V4 and DR6018-S V02 offer the 1GHz, quad -A53 Qualcomm IPQ6010, which is a slower version of the 1.8GHz IPQ6018 on the DR6018. The DR6018-S V02 also offers an option for the IPQ6018, as well as a similar, 1.8GHz, quad -A53 IPQ6000, which we have seen on Wallys’ DR6000 and similar Compex CP03 mesh router board. The IPQ6000 is also available on 8devices Mango module and Mango-DVK dev kit. # ⚓ Intel_to_Ship_Ubuntu_IoT_Chips⠀⇛ Intel IoT flavor of Linux operating system to target scaling and massive fleets with built-in security features. # ⚓ PICO-EHL4_Pico-ITX_SBC_features_Elkhart_Lake_CPU_for_IoT Edge_applications⠀⇛ AAEON PICO-EHL4 is a Pico-ITX single board computer based on Intel Atom x6000E, Celeron and Pentium “Elkhart Lake” processors designed for IoT edge applications. The SBC supports up to 16 GB LPDDR4 RAM via two SO- DIMM sockets as well as eMMC and SATA storage, offers two HDMI 2.0b video outputs, dual Gigabit Ethernet, two USB 3.0 interfaces, as well expansion capabilities via mini PCIe and M.2 sockets. # § Hardware/Modding⠀➾ # ⚓ LattePanda_3_Delta_SBC_combines_Celeron_N5105_SoC with_Arduino_(Crowdfunding)⠀⇛ LattePanda 3 Delta is the new version of the x86 + Arduino board introduced in 2015 with an Intel Atom x5-Z8300 processor, and followed by LattePanda Alpha/Delta in 2017 with respectively Kaby Lake and Gemini Lake processors. The new LattePanda 3 Delta brings some serious performance boost with an Intel Celeron N5105 quad-core Jasper Lake processor that doubles the CPU performance, triples the GPU speed, and enables smooth 4K HDR video playback. Plus no vaccine is required that for that delta variant! # ⚓ Latest,_Jasper_Lake_based_LattePanda_SBC_starts_at $229⠀⇛ On Kickstarter: a $229 “LattePanda 3 Delta” SBC that runs Win 10 or Linux on Jasper Lake. The SBC provides an Arduino Leonardo, 8GB RAM, 64GB eMMC, GbE, WiFi-6, M.2 M- and B- key, HDMI, eDP, 100 GPIO pins, and 4x USB including a Gen2 and Type-C with DP. Shanghai based LattePanda has gone to Kickstarter to successfully launch a Jasper Lake based update to its earlier Gemini Lake based LattePanda Delta SBC. The LattePanda 3 Delta is far more than a processor upgrade, adding M.2 B-key, WiFi-6, USB 3.2 Gen2, and twice the RAM and eMMC. LattePanda has quickly doubled its $40K goal and is available through Dec. 17 starting at $229, with shipments due in March or April. # ⚓ Raspberry_Pi_Zero_2_W_review:_Low-cost_single-board device_gets_a_quad-core_upgrade [Ed: Review by a hardcore Microsoft booster]⠀⇛ The launch of the $15 Pi Zero 2 W was still something of a surprise. Not only did it offer considerable speed upgrades, it introduced new Raspberry Pi-specific silicon packaging in the RP3A0. Starting with the same quad-core 64-bit ARM Cortex-A53 SoC used in the Raspberry Pi 3 (BCM2710A1), it packages the processor die with 512MB of SDRAM, putting the memory in the same package as the SoC. The packaging even includes its own copper heatsinks, which should mean the Pi Zero 2 W runs cooler than its predecessor — even when it’s running at 1 GHz. This isn’t Raspberry Pi developing its own silicon like it did with the RP2040, but it is providing its own spin on silicon packaging. # ⚓ Focus_Flower_Motivates_By_Squirting_Water_In_Your Face_|_Hackaday⠀⇛ Operation Focus Flower is simple: just push the easy button to start the task timer, and the Arduino Nano attached will begin a countdown. Push the button again when you’re done, but if you don’t do it before the countdown is over, the plant squirts you with a steady, skin-blasting stream of water from a solenoid-driven flosser tip. An air compressor nearby is required, which blows the minimalist vibe a bit, but you could always stow that part underneath your desk. # § Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications⠀➾ # ⚓ Netflix_unleashes_first_wave_of_mobile_games, starting_on_Android_|_Light_Reading⠀⇛ # ⚓ Android_12′s_theming_system_can_crash_games_while you’re_playing⠀⇛ # ⚓ The_new_Material_You_Google_Drive_widget_appears_on Android_12_–_PhoneArena⠀⇛ # ⚓ Android_12_is_draining_some_Google_Pixel_batteries_— what_you_need_to_know_|_Tom’s_Guide⠀⇛ # ⚓ Some_Google_Pixel_phones_suffer_from_battery_drain with_Android_12⠀⇛ # ⚓ Samsung_is_updating_Good_Lock_for_Android_12, starting_with_QuickStar_and_One_Hand_Operation_+⠀⇛ # ⚓ How_To_Edit_Quick_Settings_In_Android_12⠀⇛ # ⚓ How_to_download_and_play_GTA_5_on_Android_smartphones via_Steam_Link:_A_beginner’s_guide⠀⇛ # ⚓ LG_Reveals_Android_Automotive_System_For_The_Renault Mégane ⠀⇛ # ⚓ Google_Confirms_New_Android_Threat:_Millions_Of_Users Affected⠀⇛ # ⚓ Google_squashes_Android_zero‑day_bug_exploited_in targeted_attacks_|_WeLiveSecurity⠀⇛ # ⚓ Walmart’s_Cheap_onn._Android_TV_Box_Just_Got_Even Cheaper⠀⇛ # ⚓ Here’s_why_Jio’s_$87_Android_phone_won’t_give_Google its_next_billion_users_|_Android_Central⠀⇛ o § Free, Libre, and Open Source Software⠀➾ # ⚓ Nextcloud_introduces_Native_Backup_App⠀⇛ Joos Poortfliet from Nextcloud has given me the prospect of an eventful November. It started on November 1st. with the presentation of the beta version of the peer-to-peer app Nextcloud Backup, which is now available for testing. This is good news for everyone who hosts a Nextcloud themselves, because this clientele previously had to create their data backup using third-party software. In the future, Nextcloud Backup will allow regular compressed, encrypted backups of your data on your Nextcloud server. The app, which is designed for ease of use, is delivered with Nextcloud 23 in a stable version. # ⚓ Improve_your_website_SEO_with_this_astonishing_FOSS_tool: SEO_Panel⠀⇛ The internet is full of tools to check websites for SEO-related problems. However, they are not free, almost all of them come with a cost. Unlike these tools which became services with subscriptions, our pick for today is offering a great value for free as free open-source software (FOSS). Seo Panel is a self-hosted web-based app that helps site owner check their websites for errors and fix them to improve their SEO and website presence. Seo panel is a fairly old project, it first appeared more than a decade ago. Since then, millions of users used it to improve their website SEO. # § Web Browsers⠀➾ # § Mozilla⠀➾ # ⚓ Mozilla_Open_Policy_&_Advocacy_Blog:_Mozilla publishes_position_paper_on_the_EU_Digital Identity_Framework⠀⇛ Earlier this year the European Commission unveiled its proposed ‘Digital Identity Framework’, a revision to the 2014 eIDAS regulation. While the draft law includes many welcome provisions on the security and interoperability of digital ID, it also contains a set of provisions that, if adopted, would have a fundamentally negative impact on the website security ecosystem. Our new position paper spells out the risks involved in forcing browsers to support a kind of web certificate known as Qualified Web Authentication Certificates (QWACs), and provides recommendations for lawmakers in the European Parliament and EU Council who are presently amending the draft law. Web browsers are key user agents in our modern digital world. The web browser helps people visit the sites and services they want to use, and it protects them while they are there. One of the most important ways in which browsers protect users is through website authentication. For instance, if a person wants to visit Europa.eu, the web browser must reliably ensure that the site is actually under control of the owner of the domain ‘Europa.eu’, and not an attacker on the network impersonating the European Commission’s domain. Absent that assurance, users might send passwords, personal details, and other compromising information to the wrong party, putting them at risk of identity theft, fraud, and other privacy interferences. # ⚓ Add-on_Policy_Changes_2021⠀⇛ From time to time, the Add-ons Team makes changes to the policies in order to provide more clarity for developers, improve privacy and security for users, and to adapt to the evolving needs of the ecosystem. Today we’d like to announce another such update, to make sure the Add-ons developer community is well-prepared for when we start to enforce them on December 1st, 2021. # § Productivity Software/LibreOffice/Calligra⠀➾ # ⚓ LibreOffice_7.1.7_Released_as_the_Last_Update_in_the Series,_Upgrade_to_LibreOffice_7.2_Now⠀⇛ The LibreOffice 7.1 office suite was released in February 2021 and it’s supported until November 30th, 2021. Today, The Document Foundation released LibreOffice 7.1.7 as the last point release for those still using the LibreOffice 7.1 series. LibreOffice 7.1.7 is a minor update to address a few bugs across various of the office suite’s core components. A total of 27 bugs were squashed in this point release, and you can see details about them in the RC1 and RC2 changelogs. # ⚓ Announcement_of_LibreOffice_7.1.7_Community⠀⇛ LibreOffice 7.1.7 Community, the seventh minor release of the LibreOffice 7.1 family, targeted to desktop productivity, is available for download from https:// www.libreoffice.org/download/. End user support is provided by volunteers via email and online resources: https:// www.libreoffice.org/get-help/community- support/. On the website and the wiki there are guides, manuals, tutorials and HowTos. Donations help us to make all of these resources available. For enterprise-class deployments, TDF strongly recommends the LibreOffice Enterprise family of applications from ecosystem partners, with long-term support options, professional assistance, custom features and Service Level Agreements: https: //www.libreoffice.org/download/libreoffice- in-business/. # ⚓ TDF_Board_elections:_Live_sessions_with_the candidates⠀⇛ With elections for The Document Foundation’s Board of Directors running, the Membership Committee is planning to conduct a live Q&A session with the candidates. The sessions are not mandatory (the candidates can decide whether or not to attend), and TDF members can send the questions to be asked during the live session in advance to this address (which reaches the Membership Committee in private). The Committee will collect questions together, for easier moderation of the sessions. # § FSFE⠀➾ # ⚓ Software_shapes_society._Free_Software_improves_it.⠀⇛ The transparency and adaptability of Free Software enhance cooperation, inclusivity, and self-determination. This leads us to a society with stronger democratic procedures and community spirit. “The difference between Free and proprietary software is that Free Software always grants us four rights: any person may freely use, study, share, and improve the software. If software is developed under a free license, then anyone can use it without restrictions, anytime and anywhere. Since the source code can be read by anyone, this allows for more transparency and can lead to more security. People can work together across borders on problems that affect humanity; they can share the software, discuss it, and improve it collectively.” # § FSF⠀➾ # § GNU Projects⠀➾ # ⚓ “Understanding_and_designing_technologies_for everyday_financial_collaboration”_published⠀⇛ We are happy to announce that Belén finished her PhD thesis on”Understanding and designing technologies for everyday financial collaboration” which contains many inspirational ideas for future payment systems like GNU Taler: Perhaps enticed by the promise of reduced marginal costs per customer and other “operational efficiencies”, the financial industry seems to take for granted that introducing technology into their services delivers convenience and makes it easier for people to manage their money. The overwhelmingly positive discourse that surrounds financial technologies portrays them as the inevitable next step in the evolution of money, and as driving consumer empowerment by reducing costs and improving quality of service. Research, however, has linked those very same technologies to new and existing forms of financial exclusion. This raises the question of how we can design financial technologies that promote access and fairness. In this thesis, I take on this question by casting a critical lens over the design of financial technologies through experiences of financial difficulty and financial third party access. I conducted qualitative studies with a team inside the banking industry tasked with servicing customers deemed “vulnerable”; and with a group of people who live under the “double trouble” (Topor et al., 2016) of mental illness and financial difficulty. The latter trialled a new financial third party access digital service for 3 months. These varied perspectives on financial difficulty and third party access reveal the unintended consequences of introducing technology into our interactions with money, and the theories and assumptions concealed in the design of existing financial technologies. # § Programming/Development⠀➾ # ⚓ Facebook’s_BOLT_Nearing_Mainline_LLVM_For_Optimizing Binaries_–_Phoronix⠀⇛ Facebook’s BOLT project for optimizing the performance out of compiled binaries is nearing the point of being added to LLVM’s official source tree with its mono repository. BOLT has been an engineering project at Facebook going back years that is a Binary Optimization and Layout Tool for speeding up Linux binaries. It aims to optimize the speed of large applications based on a collected execution profile, generated via Linux perf or similar, by improving the code layout for greater efficiency. # ⚓ Monthly_Report_–_October⠀⇛ The festive season began already and I miss celebrating festivals with family and friends. But this is nothing new, I should get used to it now. Still sometimes it hurts really bad after all we are humans. In the past, we tried to be with family during festive season. The truth is it didn’t feel the same. I don’t know why. Could it be we are no longer carefree souls? But that can’t be true. I have seen some of my friends on Facebook sharing celebration moments with family. It looks so beautiful and cute. The only difference I can think of is that they with family and I don’t. I would like to mention one friend from Nepal. We never met but I always watch his Facebook post having great time with his family. I think we became friends because of common love for Perl. # ⚓ Steinar_H._Gunderson:_Superopt⠀⇛ GCC optimizes this pretty much as you’d expect; CSE on the AND expression, do two compares with either branching or sete + or (depending on whether you actually want 0/ 1 or to branch on the expression). But could we do better? After some attempts to deal with this by hand, I turned to GNU superopt, a program with last update in 1995, and beat it into submission to get it to compile. (It only does 32-bit, of course. It hasn’t even heard of ARM.) # § C++⠀➾ # ⚓ What_is_a_Functor_in_C++?⠀⇛ The word functor is quite known in C++. The functor is quite like a class that behaves like a function or method. It will let you make some objects that are similar to functions and can use the operator(). In simple words, the functors are those objects that can be used as functions or likewise. These are helpful when a user wants to pass more than 1 argument in a function while that function doesn’t allow it. Today, we will learn about functors in C++ within Ubuntu 20.04. Start by opening the shell terminal with the “Ctrl+Alt+T” shortcut on the Ubuntu 4desktop. # ⚓ What_is_a_Const_Pointer_in_C++?⠀⇛ The word “const” i.e., constant, means “no change” to any variable value within the programming languages. The pointer in programming refers to a variable that is pointing towards some specific address, probably of some variable address. The constant pointer will be one that will always point in the direction of the same address. This means the address of a variable to which the pointer is pointing cannot be updated so far. Therefore, in this article, we will see what is a constant pointer in C++ and how it works. So, let’s have a good start. # ⚓ What_are_Nested_Loops_in_C++_with_Examples?⠀⇛ Typecasting refers to a method of converting one data type to another for the sake of computational ease. The C++ programming language also supports typecasting. There are mainly two types of typecasting in C++, i.e., implicit typecasting and explicit typecasting. What is Typecasting in C++ is explained in this article. # ⚓ What_is_Typecasting_in_C++?⠀⇛ Typecasting refers to a method of converting one data type to another for the sake of computational ease. The C++ programming language also supports typecasting. As far as this article is concerned, we will take an in-depth look at what this phenomenon is and how it can be implemented in C++ on a Ubuntu 20.04 system. # § Python⠀➾ # ⚓ Sandro_Tosi:_Python:_send_emails_with_embedded images⠀⇛ # § Shell/Bash/Zsh/Ksh⠀➾ # ⚓ What_is_AWK_NF?⠀⇛ The AWK scripting language also has a series of built-in special variables to serve some pre-defined purposes. One such built-in variable is “NF” which has its own pre-defined functionality. This article will explore the purpose of this built-in AWK variable by demonstrating some relevant examples in Ubuntu 20.04. # § Rust⠀➾ # ⚓ This_Week_In_Rust:_This_Week_in_Rust_415⠀⇛ * § Leftovers⠀➾ o § Science⠀➾ # ⚓ Mach_20_In_A_Wind_Tunnel:_Yes,_It’s_Rocket_Science_| Hackaday⠀⇛ Hypersonic speeds are defined by those exceeding Mach 5, and lately there’s been a lot of buzz about unmanned hypersonic vehicles making test flights. Vehicles returning from orbital flight also travel at hypersonic speeds as they do their best to transition back to the terrestrial realm. Before anything leaves ground though, these machines are tested in wind tunnels. [Scott Manley]’s video “How Hypersonic Wind Tunnels Recreate Mach 20” (embedded below) does a wonderful job of explaining the engineering behind wind tunnels for testing hypersonic vehicles. While the earliest wind tunnels such as that used by the Wright Brothers were powered by simple fans, it is not possible for any propeller to surpass subsonic speeds. This is evidenced by there not being any propeller driven aircraft that can exceed Mach 1. Since an aircraft can’t reach those speeds with a propeller, it follows that a wind tunnel cannot be driven by propellers, fans, or any such device, and exceed Mach 1 wind speed, either. So it begs the question: Just how do they do it? o § Hardware⠀➾ # ⚓ Russell_Coker:_USB_Microphones⠀⇛ I want to install a microphone in my workstation for long Zoom training sessions (7 hours in a day) that otherwise require me to use multiple Android devices as I don’t have a device that will do 7 hours of Zoom without running out of battery. A new workstation with USB-C is unreasonably expensive. A PCIe USB-C card would give me the port at the back of the machine, I can’t have the back of the machine near the microphone because it’s too noisy. If I could have a USB-C hub with reasonable length cables (the 1M cables typical for USB 2.0 hubs would be fine) connected to a USB-C port at the back of my workstation that would work. But there seems to be a great lack of USB-C hubs. NewBeDev has an informative post about the lack of USB- C hubs that have multiple USB-C ports [2]. There also seems to be a lack of USB-C hubs with cables longer than 20cm. # ⚓ Curious_Marc_Takes_On_Sewing_Machine_Repair_|_Hackaday⠀⇛ Even the most talented engineers can be stymied by simple repair projects. In this case, repairing a broken sewing machine has [CuriousMarc] all tangled up. [Marc] is probably best known as a part of the team who managed to restore and boot up an apollo guidance computer, but he’s worked with plenty of other vintage machines. This problem hit much closer to home. [Marc’s] daughter wanted to sew a Halloween costume. The machine would boot up fine, but when attempting to sew, it would make a bit of noise, then beep and display “The safety device has been activated”. Not very helpful. o § Integrity/Availability⠀➾ # § Proprietary⠀➾ # § Security⠀➾ # ⚓ U.S._blacklists_Israeli_hacking_tool_vendor_NSO Group⠀⇛ The U.S. Commerce Department added Israel’s NSO Group and Candiru to its trade blacklist on Wednesday, saying they sold spyware to foreign governments that used the equipment to target government officials, journalists and others. Positive Technologies of Russia, and Computer Security Initiative Consultancy PTE LTD, from Singapore, were also listed. The Department said they trafficked in cyber tools used to gain unauthorized access to computer networks. # ⚓ US_blacklists_Israeli_firm_NSO_Group_for_use_of spyware⠀⇛ # ⚓ New_NSO_sanctions_could_spark_a_global_turn against_spyware⠀⇛ # ⚓ US_Blacklists_NSO_Group⠀⇛ The Israeli cyberweapons arms manufacturer — and human rights violator, and probably war criminal — NSO Group has been added to the US Department of Commerce’s trade blacklist. US companies and individuals cannot sell to them. Aside from the obvious difficulties this causes, it’ll make it harder for them to buy zero-day vulnerabilities on the open market. # ⚓ Remote_code_execution_flaw_patched_in_Linux Kernel_TIPC_module_|_ZDNet⠀⇛ The Transparent Inter Process Communication (TIPC) module has been designed to facilitate intra-cluster communication across Ethernet or UDP connections and is capable of service addressing, tracking, managing communication between nodes, and more. # ⚓ sigstore,_the_free_digital_signing_service_for open_source_supply_chain_security,_gets additional_support⠀⇛ Open source software tools and services are often created quickly and out of necessity. Linus Torvalds, for example, created the first version of git in a weekend when the Linux kernel team could no longer use BitKeeper for Source Control Management. sigstore was created earlier this year to address the massive gap for an easy, trustable and efficient digital signing tool to confirm the provenance (origin) of software. Since March 2021 sigstore has been growing rapidly and is being used for various projects. This includes Kubernetes, one of the world’s largest open source projects. But like Let’s Encrypt and the Linux Kernel, sigstore requires resources. Building the first version of the tool is different from bringing together resources to enable widespread adoption and support it for the long term. That’s why we’re excited to announce today that the project has received generous contributions from Chainguard, Cisco, HPE, Google, Red Hat and VMware to conduct an extensive security audit and hire a full-time developer relations engineer. # ⚓ 2021-11_Russian_IT_Security_Updates_–_why_it_is impossible_to_turn_off_the_Internet_in_Russia⠀⇛ # ⚓ ClamAV_0.104.1_Free_Antivirus_Package_Updating –_LinuxStoney⠀⇛ Cisco has released new releases of the free ClamAV antivirus package 0.104.1 and 0.103.4 . Recall that the project passed into the hands of Cisco in 2013 after the purchase of Sourcefire, which develops ClamAV and Snort. The project code is distributed under the GPLv2 license. # ⚓ Cisco_Releases_Security_Updates_for_Multiple Products_|_CISA⠀⇛ Cisco has released security updates to address vulnerabilities in multiple Cisco products. An attacker could exploit some of these vulnerabilities to take control of an affected system. # ⚓ BrakTooth_Proof_of_Concept_Tool_Demonstrates Bluetooth_Vulnerabilities_|_CISA⠀⇛ On November 1, 2021, researchers publicly released a BrakTooth proof-of- concept (PoC) tool to test Bluetooth- enabled devices against potential Bluetooth exploits using the researcher’s software tools. BrakTooth—originally disclosed in August 2021—is a family of security vulnerabilities in commercial Bluetooth stacks. An attacker could exploit BrakTooth vulnerabilities to cause a range of effects from denial-of-service to arbitrary code execution. # ⚓ Security_updates_for_Thursday⠀⇛ Security updates have been issued by Fedora (ansible, chromium, kernel, mupdf, python-PyMuPDF, rust, and zathura-pdf-mupdf), openSUSE (qemu and webkit2gtk3), Red Hat (firefox and kpatch-patch), Scientific Linux (firefox), SUSE (qemu, tomcat, and webkit2gtk3), and Ubuntu (firefox and thunderbird). # ⚓ Critical_RCE_Vulnerability_Reported_in_Linux Kernel’s_TIPC_Module⠀⇛ TIPC is a transport layer protocol designed for nodes running in dynamic cluster environments to reliably communicate with each other in a manner that’s more efficient and fault- tolerant than other protocols such as TCP. The vulnerability identified by SentinelOne has to do with a new message type called “MSG_CRYPTO” that was introduced in September 2020 and enables peer nodes in the cluster to send cryptographic keys. o § Censorship/Free Speech⠀➾ # ⚓ GFWatch:_A_Longitudinal_Measurement_Platform_Built_to Monitor_China’s_DNS_Censorship_at_Scale_–_The_Citizen_Lab⠀⇛ China’s sophisticated filtering system, known as the Great Firewall (GFW), is the region’s biggest impediment to the freedom of information. The GFW is built by the Chinese government and is continuously developed to serve their political interests. In this report, we introduce the design of GFWatch, a large-scale longitudinal measurement platform that informs the public about how GFW censorship changes over time and its negative impact on the free flow of information. o § Civil Rights/Policing⠀➾ # ⚓ Spotify_investors:_Stand_up_to_human_rights_abuse_–_Access Now⠀⇛ Today, Access Now sent a letter to Spotify’s biggest investors, asking them to hold the company accountable for developing a dangerous voice- recognition patent technology. Spotify claims the tech is capable of detecting the “emotional state, gender, age, or accent” of listeners—violating their right to privacy, nondiscrimination, and freedom of expression. # ⚓ Can_the_police_in_India_force_someone_to_hand_over_their phone_and_check_their_messages?⠀⇛ In several cases over the last couple of years, the police have highlighted WhatsApp chats found on phones to explain why they needed to keep people in custody. This strategy has been deployed most recently in narcotics cases involving Hindi film actress Rhea Chakraborty and Aryan Khan, the son of film star Shah Rukh Khan. It has previously been used against activist Umar Khalid and others in the Delhi riots case. Last week, there were reports of the Hyderabad police stopping people in the streets and checking their phones to see if their WhatsApp chats contained conversations about drugs. However, many legal experts say that this is completely illegal. One researcher has sent the Hyderabad Police a legal notice asking them to stop these “roving and fishing enquiry with no legal basis”. This has left many ordinary people wondering what the powers of the police are in this regard and whether they can actually conduct such searches of phones. o § Internet Policy/Net Neutrality⠀➾ # ⚓ Internet_shutdowns_and_blockings_continue_to_hide atrocities_of_military_coup_in_Sudan_–_Access_Now⠀⇛ Ten days after invading forces shut down the internet in Sudan, coinciding with the bloody military takeover, millions of people are still unable to connect to vital services, access information, or communicate with each other or the outside world. Furthermore, journalists and human rights defenders are unable to fully document events within the country. “We don’t know the full extent of brutality being inflicted upon people in Sudan,” said Marwa Fatfta, MENA Policy Manager at Access Now. “The internet blackouts are doing their job, and providing cover for the military’s violent takeover and hijacking of a possible democratic future for Sudan.” Access Now has been working closely with local partners and organizations across the world, and although the situation is constantly changing, a number of key disruptions can be confirmed by the #KeepItOn community: o § Monopolies⠀➾ # § Copyrights⠀➾ # ⚓ “The_Internet_at_its_Utopian_Best”:_A_Fabulous Feature_on_*The_Public_Domain_Review*_in_the_*TLS*_– The_Public_Domain_Review⠀⇛ Frances Wilson review’s our project for a feature in this week’s Times Literary Supplement ䷩ 𝚕𝚒𝚗𝚎 2220 ╒═══════════════════ 𝐃𝐀𝐈𝐋𝐘 𝐋𝐈𝐍𝐊𝐒 ═════════════════════════════════════════════╕ ⠀⌧ █▇▆▅▄▃▂▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 11.04.21⠀▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█ ⌧ Gemini_version_available_♊︎ ✐ Links_4/11/2021:_Voyager_Linux_21.10_and_FSF_Against_Software_Patents⠀✐ Posted in News_Roundup at 8:20 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz 🄸🄼🄰🄶🄴 🄳🄴🅂🄲🅁🄸🄿🅃🄸🄾🄽 ⦇GNOME bluefish⦈ § Contents⠀➾ * GNU/Linux o Distributions o Devices/Embedded * Free_Software/Open_Source * Leftovers * § GNU/Linux⠀➾ o § Linux Magazine⠀➾ # ⚓ Multi-Factor_Authentication_for_Login_Security⠀⇛ # ⚓ Distributed_computing_in_the_service_of_COVID_research⠀⇛ # ⚓ FOSSPicks⠀⇛ # ⚓ Kernel_News⠀⇛ # ⚓ A_security-oriented_OS⠀⇛ # ⚓ More_on_Disruption⠀⇛ # ⚓ Tails_4.22_and_Q4OS_4.6⠀⇛ # ⚓ A_proven_file_manager⠀⇛ # ⚓ Monitor_hard_disk_usage_with_Go⠀⇛ # ⚓ Probing_for_hardware_information⠀⇛ # ⚓ Monitor_your_media_with_Hard_Disk_Sentinel⠀⇛ # ⚓ Building_a_personal_note-taking_tool⠀⇛ # ⚓ And_…_Action!⠀⇛ # ⚓ In_the_news⠀⇛ # ⚓ An_innovative,_immutable_filesystem⠀⇛ # ⚓ An_alternative_search_tool_for_LibreOffice_Writer⠀⇛ # ⚓ Virtual_or_physical?⠀⇛ # ⚓ Examining_OpenBSD_from_the_point_of_view_of_a_Linux_user⠀⇛ # ⚓ Breathe_new_life_into_your_old_home_router⠀⇛ # ⚓ A_configurable,_flexible_image_processing_library⠀⇛ # ⚓ Rendering_a_perfume_bottle_with_Blender⠀⇛ # ⚓ This_month_in_Linux_Voice.⠀⇛ o § Audiocasts/Shows⠀➾ # ⚓ An_Installation_And_First_Look_Of_Fedora_35_–_Invidious⠀⇛ I’m taking a quick look at the recently released Fedora 35. After my recent negative review of Ubuntu 21.10 with the GNOME desktop, many viewers asked me to look at Fedora 35 believing that I might like Fedora’s GNOME desktop more. o § Kernel Space⠀➾ # ⚓ Lessons_from_the_linux-distros_mailing_list_[LWN.net]⠀⇛ The oss-security mailing list is specifically set up for reports and discussion of security flaws in open-source software after their embargo, if any, has expired. But the response to a recent report of the fix for a security flaw in the Linux kernel went in a different direction than usual. The report did not break the two-week embargo period, instead it was “late”, which has highlighted some problems in the management of flaws of this nature. The report from Lin Ma was for a use-after-free vulnerability in the near-field communication (NFC) protocol stack in the kernel. It had been found by fuzzing and was duly reported to the closed security@kernel.org and linux-distros mailing lists on September 1; it was assigned CVE-2021-3760 on the same day. Ma gave a detailed report of the problem to oss-security on October 26—nearly two months later. The flaw itself is difficult to trigger; it may require a compromised NFC device to send the malicious packet sequence. Alexander Peslyak (or “Solar Designer”), who administers oss-security and linux-distros, replied, noting the large gap in time before the public disclosure, which Ma had apologized for in the report. Peslyak said that there were multiple problems in the handling of the report to linux- distros. “Let’s use this opportunity to learn from the mishandling of this issue and avoid that for other issues.” # ⚓ Replacing_congestion_wait()_[LWN.net]⠀⇛ Memory management is a balancing act in a number of ways. The kernel must balance the needs of current users of memory with anticipated future needs, for example. The kernel must also balance the act of reclaiming memory for other uses, which can involve writing data to permanent storage, with the rate of data that the underlying storage devices are able to accept. For years, the memory-management subsystem has used storage-device congestion as a signal that it should slow down reclaim. Unfortunately, that mechanism, which was a bit questionable from the beginning, has not worked in a long time. Mel Gorman is now trying to fix this problem with a patch set that moves the kernel away from the idea of waiting on congestion. # ⚓ Synchronized_GPU_priority_scheduling_[LWN.net]⠀⇛ Since the early days, Unix-like systems have implemented the concept of process priorities, where higher-priority processes are given more CPU time to get their work done. Implementations have changed, and alternatives (such as deadline scheduling) are available for specialized situations, but the core priority (or, in an inverted sense, “niceness”) concept remains essentially the same. What should happen, though, in a world where increasing amounts of computing work is done outside of the CPU? Tvrtko Ursulin has put together a patch set showing how the nice mechanism can be extended to GPUs as well. As Ursulin describe the situation, the “current processing landscape seems to be more and more composed of pipelines where computations are done on multiple hardware devices”. The kernel directly controls the availability of CPU time for the work that is actually done on the CPU. But, increasingly, computing work is offloaded to GPUs, AI accelerators, or cryptocurrency-mining peripherals. Those processors, while capable, can also be overloaded by the demands placed on them. If they run their workloads in a way that disagrees with the kernel’s idea of process priorities, the end result may not be what the user would like to see. As an example, Ursulin pointed out that the Chrome browser will lower the priority of tabs that are not currently in the foreground. If one of those background tabs is doing a lot of rendering in the GPU, though, it may slow down the foreground tab even though the background work is supposed to be running at low priority. It turns out that at least some of these GPUs, including some Intel i915 versions, can perform priority-based scheduling internally. But that requires informing the GPU of the relevant priorities, and there is currently no way to communicate those decisions, which are made in user space, to the GPU. # ⚓ Controlling_the_CPU_scheduler_with_BPF_[LWN.net]⠀⇛ While the BPF virtual machine has been supported by Linux for most of the kernel’s existence, its role for much of that time was limited to, as its full name (Berkeley packet filter) would suggest, filtering packets. That began to change in 2012 with the introduction of seccomp() filtering, and the pace picked up in 2014 with the arrival of the extended BPF virtual machine. At this point, BPF hooks have found their way into many kernel subsystems. One area that has remained BPF-free, though, is the CPU scheduler; that could change if some version of this patch set from Roman Gushchin finds its way into the mainline. There are several CPU schedulers in the kernel, each of which works cooperatively to handle specific types of workloads. In systems without realtime processes, though, almost all scheduling is done by the Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS), to the point that most people probably just think of it as “the scheduler”. CFS is a complicated beast; it embodies a set of hard-learned heuristics that seek to maximize performance for a wide variety of workloads, and has a number of knobs to tweak for the cases where the heuristics need help. CPU scheduling is a complex task, though, and it is not surprising that the results from CFS are not always seen as being optimal by all users. # ⚓ Linux_5.16_Sound_Ready_To_Play_On_AMD_VanGogh_+_Yellow Carp,_Continues_USB_Low-Latency_–_Phoronix⠀⇛ The Linux sound subsystem is seeing some useful and significant additions with the Linux 5.16 kernel. Sound subsystem maintainer Takashi Iwai of SUSE today submitted the feature pull, which has already been accepted into mainline. # ⚓ Linux_5.16′s_Smorgasbord_Of_Power_Management_Changes_Land_– Phoronix⠀⇛ Sent in on Tuesday and since merged to the mainline Linux 5.16 code-base were the power management updates and accompanying ACPI and thermal changes. Intel engineer Rafael Wysocki who oversees the power management / ACPI / thermal subsystem code for the Linux kernel has sent in all of the feature changes. There isn’t any one overly exciting change this cycle but a diverse assortment of smaller changes. Below are some of the highlights. # § Graphics Stack⠀➾ # ⚓ Intel_DG2/Alchemist_Soon_To_See_Big_Performance_Boost With_Mesa_Optimizations_–_Phoronix⠀⇛ A set of patches were posted this past week by Intel open-source driver engineer Francisco Jerez with pixel pipeline optimizations that help all DG2/Alchemist platforms with double digit percentage improvements. The tentative patches providing pixel pipeline optimizations can boost the OpenGL and Vulkan performance in the range of 20~40% on DG2 discrete graphics hardware. This isn’t just for some basic tasks but workloads like Unigine Valley were nearly 40% higher on Intel DG2-448 hardware, Dota 2 around 30% faster, Xonotic by 14%, and other striking leads. o § Instructionals/Technical⠀➾ # ⚓ Now_you_can_(try_to)_serve_five_terabytes,_too⠀⇛ Almost ten years ago, I wrote an obscure post about something that would have only made sense if you also worked at Google at the time it happened (around 2010). It was a reference to an Xtranormal video that someone created about the perils of trying to get your stuff running in production without having someone hate on you for “doing it wrong”. # ⚓ How_to_parse_nginx_access_logs⠀⇛ If you want to optimize your web server, it is essential to understand Nginx access logs. Logging is the single critical action you take before an issue encounters. It also plays its part in detecting defects in web development. Nginx access logs comprise detailed information about the access requests of the users. To analyze and monitor your web server, you have to parse Nginx access logs. # ⚓ How_to_use_UPDATE_statement_in_SQLite⠀⇛ SQLite is an RDMS that is used to manage data of relational databases by following table structure. In SQLite, data can be managed by inserting, updating, and deleting values at any instant of time. It is very easy to update data in SQLite because of its simple architecture. The update statement allows users to make modifications in the data of already existing tables in SQLite. There are various commands in SQLite to perform different tasks like creating tables, modifications of data, and deletion of tables. In this follow-up, we will discuss the UPDATE statement and its works in SQLite. # ⚓ Top_MongoDB_Interview_Questions_in_2021⠀⇛ MongoDB is an open-source NoSQL database management system; it not only provides ease in storing unstructured data but also manages it. Whenever the question arises of how to manage millions of rows of unstructured data, MongoDB is recommended. MongoDB’s first version was released in February 2007 by 10gen Software company, later in 2013, 10gen changed the company name to MongoDB Inc. MongoDB is a NoSQL database that is used to store data in the JSON documents form because of this feature, a massive amount of unstructured data can easily be stored and managed in MongoDB. The set of these documents having the data are known as collections. And these collections are similar to the tables which are used in relational databases to store data. # ⚓ Step_by_Step_Setup_iRedMail_Mail_Server_on_Centos_8_– Unixcop_the_Unix_/_Linux_the_admins_deams⠀⇛ Setting up your own email server on Linux from scratch is a long and tedious process, a pain in the but if you are not an advanced user. This tutorial will be showing you how to use iRedMail to quickly set up a full-featured mail server on CentOS 8, saving you lots of time and headaches. iRedMail is a shell script that automatically installs and configures all necessary mail server components on your Linux/BSD server, thus eliminating manual installation and configuration. With iRedMail, you can easily create unlimited mailboxes and unlimited mail domains in a web-based admin panel. Mailboxes can be stored in MariaDB/ MySQL, PostgreSQL database, or OpenLDAP. The following is a list of open-source software that will be automatically installed and configured by iRedMail. # ⚓ How_to_use_PRIMARY_KEY_in_SQLite⠀⇛ SQLite is a database management system, which is used to manage the data of the relational database just like MySQL, it also contains a lot of constraints such as UNIQUE, PRIMARY KEY, and FOREIGN KEY like other databases. So what are constraints and how do they work in SQLite? This write-up is a comprehensive guide about constraints and on how to use the PRIMARY key constraint in SQLite. # ⚓ How_To_Add_a_Git_Remote_Repository_–_TecAdmin⠀⇛ Every time you clone a Git repository, you are actually downloading your project locally. This means that you will have a local copy of the Git repository tied to your project. Local copy that was created this way will be automatically connected to the remote repo. But what if you created a local copy first? In that case, you will have to add a Git remote repository. Read on and learn how to do that. o § Games⠀➾ # ⚓ Build_up_your_own_superhero_organisation_in_the_upcoming Superheroes_Academy_|_GamingOnLinux⠀⇛ Superheroes Academy is a new announcement from developer Strategy Forge, coming in 2022 your task is to build and run a school full of people with special abilities. Sound familiar? It’s basically X-Men right, and perhaps a little My Hero Academia? You lead your very own superhero agency. A management-oriented real-time strategy game with procedurally generated content where you build your base, restructure your organization, and hire, train, and command your own team of superheroes. It is up to you whether or not America will be controlled by the supervillains or remain in a peaceful golden age. # ⚓ Don’t_let_the_visuals_fool_you_–_Sunshine_Manor_is_pretty darn_spooky_|_GamingOnLinux⠀⇛ Despite the 8-bit inspired art style, Sunshine Manor manages to give off a pretty great horror atmosphere. They said to expect some “genuine jump scares” but I was not quite ready. You already know what’s coming too, with the nice little retro intro videos that explain what happened. The good thing is you don’t need to have played Camp Sunshine to enjoy it, as it is firmly a standalone game. Taking place on Halloween in the ’80s, the setup and overall theme is a pretty cliché with kids out for treats and a haunted house but it still manages to throw in plenty of surprises. You get dared to knock on the door of this rather dubious looking house, the door falls open and of course you decide to enter – because why wouldn’t you? It all goes downhill from there into magic and demonic territory and it doesn’t let up. # ⚓ Rushdown_Revolt_is_a_new_combo-centric_platform-fighter coming_to_Linux⠀⇛ Do you love platform fighters like Smash Bros, Brawlhalla, Rivals of Aether and others? Keep an eye out on Rushdown Revolt which is currently in Alpha and it recently gained experimental Linux support. # ⚓ Horror-themed_turn-based_puzzler_Dark_Crypt_is_out_now_| GamingOnLinux⠀⇛ In the Dark Crypt you must sneak through a dark dungeon to find and defeat an ancient evil lurking at the bottom. “The prophecy speaks of an ancient evil that slumbers within a crypt. It foretells its awakening which will lead to our world being consumed by its dark shadow. Your brothers at the monastery dismiss it as a pagan heresy, however you know better than that. The world’s fate rests on your shoulders. It’s up to you to find the slumbering evil and seal it, before it awakens. Can you save our world?” # ⚓ Functional_Duplications⠀⇛ I broke out my old Space War game a few days ago and decided to make a few changes to speed the game up and make it more fun to play. In so doing I discovered a very interesting bug. One of the changes I made was to populate the initial space with a few random bases scattered here and there. This would allow the player some extra resources with which to battle the Klingons while building up a network of more bases. o § Desktop Environments/WMs⠀➾ # § K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt⠀➾ # ⚓ Where_To_Download_KDE_Plasma_for_32-bit_Computer⠀⇛ Do you have an old computer? Do you love KDE Plasma? If your desktop or laptop was produced before 2011 or has memory no more than 4GB, it might be 32-bit, like those with Intel Pentium or AMD Athlon processor. You can revive it with one of KDE Plasma Desktop systems mentioned in this article, for example, Debian or Tumbleweed, and you can do your daily work with up to date applications and even games. o § Distributions⠀➾ # ⚓ After_Moving_From_FreeBSD_to_Void_Linux,_Project_Trident Finally_Discontinues⠀⇛ For those of you who have not heard of Project Trident, let me give you a little ride down memory lane. Back in 2005, Kris Moore introduced PC-BSD as an easy way to set up FreeBSD with a desktop interface. It was acquired the following year by iXsystems. In September of 2016, the name of the project was changed to TrueOS. The project also became a rolling release based on the Current branch of FreeBSD. Two years later, TrueOS announced that they would be doing away with the desktop version of their operating system and focusing on the enterprise and server market. The desktop elements were spun off to a new project: Project Trident. For a time, the dev team at Project Trident tried their best to create a good desktop experience on top of FreeBSD. However, due to issues with FreeBSD including “hardware compatibility, communications standards, or package availability continue to limit Project Trident users” they decide to base it on something else. Their solution was to rebase their project on Void Linux in 2019. For a while, it looked like the future of Project Trident was set. Then 2020 happened. # ⚓ How_Not_To_Switch_To_Linux_With_Your_Hosts_Linus_and_Luke⠀⇛ So over the last few weeks Linus and Luke over at LTT / FloatPlane have been teasing us with tales of their so-called Linux Challenge. The basic premise being that whichever of them can switch from Windows to Linux on their daily driver home PCs, wins the challenge. Simple enough, right? Well as it turns out, not actually. From a high level this could’ve been a good thing. This challenge could’ve helped to expose the benefits of choosing to be a Linux gamer to a wider audience and effectively helped to propel what is now a niche-gaming platform to another level… perhaps even the mythical “next level”. Alas that is not going to be the case here. After watching a significant portion of last night’s episode of The WAN Show it has become clear that Linus and to a lessor extent, Luke, went into this challenge with what I can only describe as the “wrong attitude”. Now before you start composing those nasty emails and tweets to me, give me a chance to explain. I’m not gate keeping here. I’m simply calling out their apparent original expectations as unrealistic and ultimately self-destructive notions that have effectively ruined the challenge and the good exposure it could have generated. This is a real shame too, because this could’ve been absolutely great. # § New Releases⠀➾ # ⚓ LinDoz_Dev-Logs_–_MakuluLinux⠀⇛ The Dev Logs are Back, Currently the the upcoming LinDoz Development build has hit Stable status, and as such We have re added the Dev Log section so users can track its progress. You can access the LinDoz Dev Log Section by Clicking Here or access it from the website main menu. We update the logs whenever there is some progress to report. # ⚓ Voyager_Linux_21.10_Available_to_Download_Based_on Ubuntu_21.10⠀⇛ The project has released Voyager Live 21.10 which offers the GNOME 40 desktop and nine months of support. “I introduce you Voyager 21.10 GE which continues the adventure with the GNOME Shell desktop version 40 by introducing new features, support for new systems and technologies and a whole new layout with visual changes for applications and virtual desktops. Improved support for AMD GPUs. A new security module called Landlock with the promise finally realized, to have a light, fast, modern, fluid, secure and efficient GNOME system in a hybrid environment for PC and Tablet. This version is based on the Linux 5.13 kernel and the Ubuntu distribution”Impish Indri” 21.10. It is an intermediate version with 9 months of updates that prepares for the future 5 year LTS – Long-Term Support version which is coming soon. With integrated, options like Conky Control, Repair, Switch Ubuntu, WINE- staging and Steam Gaming in the Box Voyager and 39 GNOME extensions selected according to PC needs.” Further information is available in the project’s release announcement. # § BSD⠀➾ # ⚓ Catchup_2021-11-03⠀⇛ Interesting developments (in -current) since OpenBSD 7.0 include: [...] # ⚓ OpenBSD_on_Raspberry_Pi_4_with_Full-Disk_Encryption⠀⇛ After some effort, I got my Raspberry Pi 4 running with OpenBSD 6.9 and full-disk encryption on a USB3 memory stick. I could find no one else online talking about this subject anywhere, except this mailing list thread. So, I thought I’d share my experience on how I got it working. I recommend you read the entire post before proceeding, so you have an idea of the process upfront. # § IBM/Red Hat/Fedora⠀➾ # ⚓ Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux_9_drops_in_beta_version⠀⇛ Red Hat Enterprise Linux version 9 released today as a beta, bringing about a dozen major new features focused on security and compliance, simplified management and automation. But the biggest news might be the lack of changes to the management and administration tools from the previous version, which could make adoption fairly painless. The key new management features include enhanced web-console performance metrics for easier diagnosis of problems, live kernel patching without the need for downtime, and an easier way to create new OS images. # ⚓ 10_Things_to_Do_After_Installing_Fedora_35_[With Bonus_Tip!]⠀⇛ I am sure you installed or upgraded to Fedora 35 already to experience new tech, features. And here’s our traditional post for every major releases – 10 Things to Do After Installing Fedora 35 with a bonus trick. # ⚓ Red_hat_Enterprises_Linux_9_Beta_Available_to Download_and_Test⠀⇛ The new beta also offers smaller binaries due to link time optimization. “Link Time Optimization (LTO) is enabled in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9, and the system comes with a number of packages that are built with it. As a result, applications have smaller and faster binaries and allow deeper inspection of source code at compile time. This can improve GCC diagnostics for potential coding errors, such as One Definition Rule (ODR) violations. Go 1.16 brings support for the new embed package, enabling developers to bundle supporting data files into their Go programs and simplify developing with Go. With Go 1.16, modules are enabled by default making language dependencies easier to manage. Additionally, there are also several other improvements and performance optimizations. With the latest LLVM 12 toolset, developers can take advantage of fresher tooling, and compatibility with other code built with compatible versions of LLVM/ Clang.” Additional information is available in the company’s release announcement and in the release notes. The new beta release is available through the Red Hat customer portal. # ⚓ Knative_1.0:_Simplify_serverless_on_Kubernetes⠀⇛ Knative, the enterprise-grade serverless platform, has just hit a significant milestone with the release of version 1.0. To celebrate this achievement, let’s explore how Knative simplifies the developer experience on Kubernetes. We’ll also discuss how you can use Red Hat OpenShift Serverless Functions to deliver serverless, event-driven applications. # ⚓ Generating_pseudorandom_numbers_in_Python⠀⇛ Random functions typically assign the same priority to each possible choice. In some cases, though, you want to be able to make a random choice while prioritizing some options. For instance, in Project Thoth, we need to prioritize more recent releases of Python packages. We use pseudorandom number calculation to prioritize newer libraries in the exploration phase of Thoth’s reinforcement learning algorithm. This article explores termial random, a specific type of pseudorandom number calculation used in Project Thoth. We’ll use the termial-random number generator to select an item from a list, assign the highest probability to the item at index 0, then assign lower probabilities to the following items as the index increases. You can apply the discussion and resources in this article to other Python projects. # ⚓ Boost_throughput_with_RESTEasy_Reactive_in_Quarkus 2.2_|_Red_Hat_Developer⠀⇛ Quarkus has, from its beginning, provided core features for coding Java programs in both imperative and reactive style. With the new 2.2 release, Quarkus continues to improve in terms of network-related features, reactive programming, and integration with the Eclipse Vert.x event bus. For example, RESTEasy Reactive in Quarkus is a new JAX-RS implementation based on the Vert.x layer that achieves much higher throughput by handling reactive events on the non-blocking I/ O thread. # ⚓ More_tips_for_packaging_your_Linux_software_with_RPM |_Enable_Sysadmin⠀⇛ If you use Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) or Fedora, you will soon find yourself using dnf (or yum) to install software packages. Red Hat Package Manager (RPM) is the most important software management tool on these Linux distributions. This article shows how you can take advantage of this framework to distribute your own applications. # ⚓ Automation:_3_ways_to_ease_job_loss_fears⠀⇛ After experiencing huge economic disruption during the pandemic, many people worry that automation will make things worse. History shows that ever since the Industrial Revolution, automation has indeed disrupted employment and the wage structure, but it has also created more jobs with time. In fact, according to a World Economic Forum report published last year, 97 million jobs will be created by 2025, significantly exceeding the 85 million it expects will be lost. Automation will reengineer processes, reorganize tasks, and eventually create more jobs – many of which we’ve never done before. These jobs will require new higher-order skills that will be in great demand and in short supply in all parts of the world. This situation presents an opportunity to tackle both automation-related job loss and the global skills shortage at the same time. But doing so will require new skills and learning models from job seekers as well as education providers, business organizations, and other members of the employment ecosystem. Leaders must also address the automation-related job loss worries directly. # ⚓ Working_on_your_emotional_intelligence?_Try_these_CIO tips⠀⇛ Emotional intelligence (EQ) is a must-have core skill for leaders, but it’s not always easy to develop. It’s not something you can learn from a single workshop or book. It takes time, ongoing practice, and years of self-reflection to get right. But this work comes with a big payoff, says Mike McGuire, chief operations & CTO of Delta Dental of MN and president of Abōva Technologies. “Effective leadership requires a broad range of EQ skills, all of which include ongoing practice and patience. As these skills become foundational to your leadership approach, team members will be inspired and will naturally develop a deeper level of loyalty to you, the team, and the organization. It not only defines your ability to understand and manage your emotions as a leader but influences the response and emotions of those around you,” says McGuire. We asked CIOs who recently won the 2021 Twin Cities CIO of the Year ORBIE Awards how they are personally nurturing their emotional intelligence skills. The awards were presented by the Twin Cities CIO Leadership Association, a professional community that annually recognizes CIOs for their excellence in technology leadership. # § EasyOS and Debian Family⠀➾ # ⚓ Disable_pulseaudio_idle-exit_and_support_multiple users⠀⇛ Previous blog post in the pulseaudio and pipewire saga: https://bkhome.org/news/202111/can-now- switch-between-pulseaudio-and-pipewire.html Before getting onto the subject of multiple users, one thing that has been a headache for me, and after some online reading a headache for many others, is the idle-exit of the pulseaudio daemon. Normally, a daemon is something that you start, and it keeps running for duration of the session. Not so with /usr/bin/pulseaudio. It defaults to exit after 20 seconds being idle, and it “respawns” on request, like when an app such as pavucontrol, the pulseaudio GUI mixer app, starts. When pavucontrol quits, so does the daemon 20 seconds later. # ⚓ Pulseaudio_support_multiple_users_with_TCP⠀⇛ I posted very early this morning how to support multiple users by using a Unix Domain Socket. Now considering an alternative, the TCP network protocol. # ⚓ More_Software-Defined_Radio_Projects_Using_DragonOS⠀⇛ DragonOS, a Debian-based Linux distribution specifically packaged for software-defined radio functionality, roared onto the wavelengths during the beginnings of the various pandemic lockdowns last year. Since then [Aaron], the creator of the OS, has been busy adding features to the distribution as well as creating plenty of videos which show off its capabilities and also function as how-tos for people who might want to learn about software-defined radio. The latest is a video about using this software to detect radio signals in certain specified spectrums. # ⚓ CORECURSIVE_#070:_Leaving_Debian:_With_Joey_Hess⠀⇛ Adam:Joey dedicated a large part of his adult life to working on Debian, and he’s going to give us a peek into that world. He had times worked for years without pay to push Debian forward, and then something changed and he decided to leave of it all behind. So that’s, today’s story. An insider view of Debian. The good and the bad. And it’s almost all good. It’s a story that’s about open source software, but it’s also about community and about teamwork. Joey’s introduction to Linux started a similar way to my story with trying to install Slackware. He was at Cornell staying in residence and someone lent them 15 floppy discs. o § Devices/Embedded⠀➾ # § Open Hardware/Modding⠀➾ # ⚓ Learn_how_to_build_your_own_massive_3D-printed_CNC router_|_Arduino_Blog⠀⇛ 3D printers are very popular in the maker community and CNC machines complement them well. While 3D printers fabricate parts by adding material over time, CNC mills and routers fabricate parts by subtracting material. That is preferable when working with large parts or when you require a lot of precision. If you want an affordable option, this guide will show how to build Ivan Miranda’s 3D-printed CNC machine design. Miranda posted his first video about this 3D- printed CNC machine back in March, 2020. He eventually published the design files on his website, but didn’t provide many details on parts sourcing or assembly. The GitHub page linked above, created by Max Fischer, provides thorough guidance for people looking to build their own machines based on Miranda’s design. It gives you a detailed bill of materials and walks you through the entire build process with step-by-step photo instructions. # ⚓ Hacking_The_Mekamon_Robot_To_Add_New_Capabilities_| Hackaday⠀⇛ The Mekamon from Reach Robotics is a neat thing, a robot controlled by a phone app that walks on four legs. [Wes Freeman] decided to hack the platform, giving it a sensor package and enabling some basic autonomous behaviours in the process. [Wes] started out by using a packet sniffer to figure out the command system for controlling the Mekamon robot over Bluetooth. Then, he set about fitting a Raspberry Pi 3 on the ‘bot, along with a Pi Camera on a gimballed camera head. Running OpenCV on the Raspberry Pi gives the Mekamon robot the ability to follow a colored ball placed in its field of vision. Later work involved upgrading the hardware to a Pi Compute Module 3, with its dual camera inputs allowing for the use of a stereo imaging setup. # ⚓ Video:_MiSTer_FPGA_Fall_2021_Update_| MontanaLinux.org⠀⇛ YouTuber RetroBits provides an Fall 2021 update for the MiSTer FPGA. Included is a preview for some upcoming cores. Enjoy! # ⚓ Simplify_3D_Printer_Wiring_With_CAN_Bus_|_Hackaday⠀⇛ [mark] had an interesting idea when looking at all the wiring of a typical 3D printer; Use CAN Bus. There are a lot of wires going to the extruder assembly, and with most designs this thing is flying around at quite some speed. You’ve got connections for powering the heater, fan power, four wires for the extruder motor, thermistor sensor wires. You get the idea. Lots of wires. Worse, they’re all moving around with the axis, and if failures occur at either end due to poor strain relief, or the conductors themselves break, then all manner of interesting failures can occur. If the hot end thermistor connection goes open circuit, usually no damage occurs but the temperature control goes out the window and your print will fail. # § Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications⠀➾ # ⚓ Android_Users_Need_to_Uninstall_These_151_Apps Immediately_|_PCMag⠀⇛ # ⚓ How_To_Prevent_Apps_From_Showing_Up_As_Bubbles_In Android_12⠀⇛ # ⚓ Unenroll_Pixel_from_Android_12_Beta_to_get_November update_–_9to5Google⠀⇛ # ⚓ Verizon_Pixel_3_series,_Pixel_4_Series,_Pixel_5_Get Android_12;_LG_G_Pad_5_10.1_and_Nokia_3_V_Get_New Security_Update⠀⇛ # ⚓ Android_12_update_coming_to_Xiaomi,_Redmi_devices_– Android_Community⠀⇛ # ⚓ Samsung_Galaxy_Tab_S8_Lite_leak_says_it’s_a_new Android_tablet_coming_in_2022_|_TechRadar⠀⇛ # ⚓ Some_Google_Pixel_phones_suffer_from_battery_drain with_Android_12⠀⇛ # ⚓ Android_12_wallpapers_will_crash_apps_and_games_– 9to5Google⠀⇛ # ⚓ Xiaomi_Android_12_upgrade_list_shows_it’s_on_the right_track_–_SlashGear⠀⇛ # ⚓ Some_Google_Pixel_phones_suffer_from_battery_drain with_Android_12⠀⇛ # ⚓ [Updated]_Android_11_update_tracker_for_major_OEMs/ skins_(One_UI_3/3.1,_MIUI_12,_OxygenOS_11,_Funtouch_OS 11/OriginOS,_ColorOS_11_&_Realme_UI_2)_–_PiunikaWeb⠀⇛ # ⚓ Google_Pixel_6_review:_The_best_Android_phone, period._–_Bestgamingpro⠀⇛ # ⚓ Hisense_Android_TV_sale_goes_live_with_up_to_$315_off –_9to5Google⠀⇛ # ⚓ Firefox_94_for_Android_Brings_A_Revamped_Homescreen⠀⇛ # ⚓ How_to_use_SwiftKey’s_Cloud_Clipboard_to_Copy/Paste Between_Android_and_PC⠀⇛ # ⚓ Android_wallpaper_fingerprints⠀⇛ Uniquely identifying users so that they can be tracked as they go about their business on the internet is, sadly, a major goal for advertisers and others today. Web browser cookies provide a fairly well-known avenue for tracking users as they traverse various web sites, but mobile apps are not browsers, so that mechanism is not available. As it turns out, though, there are ways to “fingerprint” Android devices—and likely those of other mobile platforms—so that the device owners can be tracked as they hop between their apps. While cookies provide an easy mechanism to assign a unique ID to a particular browser instance, there are ways around being tracked that way. Since cookies are stored locally, they can be deleted or the browser can restrict how they can be used. Beyond that, users can instruct their browsers to reject cookies. Because of that, at least in part, browser fingerprinting came about. Browser fingerprinting originally used JavaScript to query various characteristics of the browser environment (e.g. display size, plugins and fonts installed, localization settings) and combined that with information like the User-Agent string sent by the browser to derive an ID that was often unique to the user. As browser makers tried to reduce the amount and diversity of information revealed, tracking companies evolved newer techniques (e.g. canvas fingerprinting). The Panopticlick tool from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) helped demonstrate fingerprinting and the organization now has the Cover Your Tracks tool that shows how well the browser is protecting against fingerprinting. In the mobile space, many of the same fingerprinting techniques work within the browsers, but these days users often use apps to access content, rather than a browser. Apps can simply directly send whatever information they deem necessary to do their job; they do not have to rely on users to store and preserve cookies. But Android apps do not have access to JavaScript and the browser environment directly, and the Android API is somewhat restrictive on what kinds of information about the environment apps can get. They also cannot directly share an ID with each other on the phone. So other techniques are needed. o § Free, Libre, and Open Source Software⠀➾ # ⚓ SiteInspector:_An_Open-source_app_to_improve_your_SEO⠀⇛ SiteInspector is an outstanding free self-hosted web-based SEO tool that keeps you in track of all problems in your websites. It comes with a simple, user-friendly interface, that allows a user or multiple users to add any number of websites and check them continuously for errors. The first thing that we like about SiteInspector is: that it takes less than a few minutes to install or upgrade to a new version. With SiteInspector, website admins can audit multiple websites and check for broken links, grammatical errors and spelling errors for all the pages and internal links. # ⚓ Kuma:_An_enterprise_control_plane_for_almost_anything⠀⇛ Kuma is an open-source general-purpose control panel system for distributed systems, service mesh, IoT, routing, and more. It supports multiple mesh setups and comes with dozens of built-in metrics and customizable widgets, which makes it ideal for large-scale projects and IoT systems. # § Web Browsers⠀➾ # § Chromium⠀➾ # ⚓ Chrome_Dev_Summit_2021:_Moving_toward_a_more powerful_and_private_web⠀⇛ The big day is finally here. Today, at Chrome Dev Summit 2021 we shared some of the highlights of what we’ve been working on — the latest product updates, vision for the web’s future and examples of best-in-class web experiences. Over the past year, we’ve also had a lot of feedback that you want to spend more time learning from and working with the Chrome team and other industry experts. I’m excited to share with you that we’ve opened up a lot of spaces for 1:1 office hours, workshops and learning lounges to give you more opportunity to connect with the Chrome team. It’s been a busy year for us all and with the continued shift of people moving more of their lives online, it has been more important than ever for us to continue investing in Web Compat, and we’ve been amazed to see the improvements in compatibility across the board that is helping to make it easier for you to build sites that work across all browsers for everyone who uses the web. # § Education⠀➾ # ⚓ Zettelkasten_in_plain_text-only_flat_files⠀⇛ A Zettelkasten starts working when it contains some critical mass. There needs to be enough Zettel, with enough ideas and enough cross references, before it starts to really work. Zettelkasten therefor gain value over time, typically one or more decades. What ever the system you choose to implement your Zettelkasten in, be sure it will survive that long and still is available and useful in, say, ten or twenty years. # ⚓ The_Best_Maker_Schools_2021⠀⇛ This year for the first time Newsweek has teamed up with Make:, publisher of Make: magazine and books, to find The Best Maker Schools in Higher Education. These are universities, community and junior colleges, vocational and trade schools with curricula that encourage learning by doing; are supported by educators committed to collaborative problem-solving; have well- developed makerspaces, labs, and studios; and which support diverse, interactive communities that engage in knowledge and skill sharing. Our goal was to highlight institutions with innovative programs that demonstrate the ingenuity and community engagement that are hallmarks of the maker movement. This non-ranked list was generated by recommendation through a survey tool in collaboration with an international community of educators, administrators, students and maker leaders. To be considered for the list, recommended schools had to demonstrate excellence or competency in the following areas: [...] # § FSF⠀➾ # ⚓ Join_the_fight_against_software_patents_with_the revamped_campaign_site⠀⇛ There are many problems caused by the enforcement of patents in the software industry, but it is important to first understand how user and developer freedoms are affected. If you don’t know what End Software Patents (ESP) is about, please read the recent article we posted on the issue of software patents. To support the continued fight against software patents, we are happy to announce that the ESP campaign pages have been completely revamped! In this brief post, we will go over the main changes that you should know about. ESP has been active for many years, campaigning and influencing public policies around the world. The campaign has been extremely influential, and has become known as one of the most popular global campaigns against software patents, especially after publishing Patent Absurdity, a documentary that demonstrated the severity of the issue. So far, it has been able to influence important court rulings and policy decisions on software patents in a positive direction. However, a major challenge that ESP had to face was to attract people who were not familiar with the legal aspects of software. The main target audience consisted mainly of developers, lawyers, and people related to the software industry. But this wasn’t optimal, because software patents ultimately affect every single software user. # § Licensing/Legal⠀➾ # ⚓ What_a_copyright_license_can_do⠀⇛ Copyright allows you to restrict redistribution, and copyright licenses allow you to (wholly or provisionally) lift those restrictions. That’s all it can do. Again, don’t shoot the messenger on that. # § Programming/Development⠀➾ # ⚓ Excellent_Free_Tutorials_to_Learn_Limbo⠀⇛ Limbo is a programming language intended for applications running distributed systems on small computers. It supports modular programming, strong type checking at compile- and run-time, interprocess communication over typed channels, automatic garbage collection, and simple abstract data types. Syntactically similar to C, it has several features that make it simpler, safer and yet more powerful and better suited to the development of concurrent, distributed systems. Limbo borrows from, among other things, C (expression syntax and control flow), Pascal (declarations), Winterbottom’s Alef (abstract data types and channels), and Hoare’s CSP and Pike’s Newsqueak (processes). The language is designed for safe execution even on small machines without hardware memory protection. For several architectures, including Intel x86 and MIPS, Limbo object programs are transformed on-the-fly into instructions for the underlying hardware. # ⚓ Unicode_in_C⠀⇛ Unicode is a globally used standard for character encoding. It is specifically used to assign some code to every character in every linguistic worldwide. There are many other encoding standards. Unfortunately, not a single encoding standard can be applied to all worldwide languages. So, Here comes the Unicode encoding standard that makes sure to fetch and syndicate any data information by utilizing any grouping of linguistics. Unicode encoding is required at all web-based platforms and in different languages, i.e., XML, Java, JavaScript, etc. There are 2 most used Unicode implementations for PCs, i.e., UTF-8 and UTF-16. # ⚓ Turn_any_website_into_a_Linux_desktop_app_with_open source_tools⠀⇛ Mastodon is a great open source, decentralised social network. I use Mastodon every day, and it’s probably most common to use Mastodon through its web interface (although being open source, there are many different ways to interact with it, including terminal-based applications and mobile apps), but I prefer dedicated application windows. Recently, I discovered Nativefier, and I can now enjoy Mastodon, or any other web app, as a desktop application on my Linux desktop. Nativefier takes a URL and wraps it with the Electron framework, which runs the open source Chromium browser as its backend but runs as its own executable application. Nativefier is licensed under the MIT license and is available for Linux, Windows, and macOS. # ⚓ USBImager_Download,_Best_Alternative_to_Etcher⠀⇛ Under Linux there are many ways to put a bootable image on a USB stick or SD card. On the command line, the tool of choice is dd , which stands for disk dump and reads and writes hard disks, partitions or files bit by bit below the file system level. If you use dd , you should be sure that you are using the right device, because once dd has been started, the target is mercilessly overwritten without confirmation. In recent years, some graphical tools have become fashionable for creating bootable USB sticks. Some distributions offer their own tools, others are independent of the distribution or operating system. Rufus has been available for Windows for 10 years, the balenaEtcher, or Etcher for short, which is available for Linux, macOS and Windows and is recommended to beginners under Linux, is more broadly based. Etcher can be operated both graphically and via CLI. # § Python⠀➾ # ⚓ Python_Ditches_The_GILs_And_Comes_Ashore_| Hackaday⠀⇛ The Python world has been fractured a few times before. The infamous transition from version 2 to version 3 still affects people today, and there could be a new schism in the future. [Sam Gross] proposed a solution to drop the Global Interrupt Lock (GIL), which would have enormous implications for many projects that leverage the CPython internals, such as Pandas and NumPy. The fact that Python is interpreted is a double edge sword. It means there can be different runtimes, such as Pyston, Cinder, MicroPython, PyPy, and others, that might support the whole language, a specific version, or a subset. But if you’re using Python, you’re probably running CPython. And it has something known as global interpreter lock that affects threaded code. In a nutshell, only one thread can run in the interpreter at a time. There are some ways around it, such as moving performance-critical sections to C or having multiple interpreters. However, most existing solutions come with considerable downsides. * § Leftovers⠀➾ o ⚓ Just_Breathe⠀⇛ o ⚓ On_Film,_a_Window_Into_Haiti⠀⇛ Haitian writer, actor, and director Gessica Généus began her career as a 17-year-old struggling to support her final years of school in Port-au-Prince by starring in a telenovela-style film about a haughty upper-class sister who thwarts a relationship between her brother and the family’s maid. That film, Barikad, launched Généus’s career and led her to take on leading roles in the critically acclaimed hits of Haiti’s film renaissance in the 2000s like Does the President Have Aids? and The Loves of a Zombie. After the country’s devastating earthquake in 2010, she moved to Paris and studied acting in Paris for two years before eventually moved into directing. o ⚓ Opinion_|_The_Leaf_Blower_and_the_Robocall:_America’s_Social Predicament⠀⇛ In the past couple of weeks, the national media briefly paused from its laser-like focus on Gabby Petito to notice that California was phasing out the sale of gas- powered leaf blowers by 2024. Not only that, but by that same date—gasp!—gas-powered lawn mowers will no longer be sold. o ⚓ Advertising_Is_Content:_Taskmaster_Edition⠀⇛ Many, many years ago on Techdirt, I wrote a lot about the idea of advertising being content (and content being advertising). The general idea was that, without captive audiences any more, you had to make your advertising into really good content that people would actually like, rather than find it annoying and intrusive. o ⚓ People_Watching⠀⇛ The only piece in their revolutionary comedic repertoire that Mike Nichols and Elaine May chose never to record was called “Pirandello.” As a result, the 18-minute meta- theatrical sketch lives on only in the mythical retellings of those lucky enough to have seen it onstage in the early 1960s. o ⚓ Martin_J._Sherwin_(1937–2021)⠀⇛ I first met Martin J. Sherwin—who died last month at the age of 84—back in the early 1980s, when I was an associate editor of The Nation. Victor Navasky got him to write a long essay that appeared as a cover story: “Hiroshima and Modern Memory” (October 10, 1981). It was quite simply brilliant—and read today, it remains brilliant. The author shared a Pulitzer Prize with Martin J. Sherwin in 2006. o ⚓ Zillow,_facing_big_losses,_quits_flipping_houses_and_will_lay_off a_quarter_of_its_staff.⠀⇛ The announcement was a major strategic retreat and a black eye for Richard Barton, Zillow’s chief executive, who founded the company 16 years ago and has long talked about transitioning Zillow’s popular website into a marketplace. Last year, Mr. Barton predicted Zillow Offers, which made instant offers on homes in a practice known as iBuying, could generate $20 billion a year. On Tuesday, Zillow, which said it has 8,000 employees, said the division had been the source of huge losses and had made the company’s overall bottom line unpredictable. Zillow Offers lost more than $420 million in the three months ending in September, roughly the same amount that the company had earned in total during the prior 12 months. o § Science⠀➾ # ⚓ A_14-year-old_won_a_prestigious_award_for_his_discoveries on_‘antiprime’_numbers⠀⇛ For his winning project, Akilan wrote a computer program that has the potential to make everyday tasks online run more smoothly and efficiently. The program he created can calculate antiprime numbers, which are highly divisible numbers with more than 1,000 digits, and he discovered a new class of functions to analyze these numbers’ divisibility. # ⚓ Martin_Kulldorff_has_joined_the_Brownstone_Institute⠀⇛ Martin Kulldorff is one of the three scientists who, after having been brought together by the right wing “free market” libertarian-leaning “think tank” American Institute for Economic Research (AIER) for a long weekend confab at its headquarters in Barrington, MA in October 2020. There they drafted the Great Barrington Declaration to tell the world what should be done about the COVID-19 pandemic. It should therefore be no surprise that Kulldorff recently announced that he’s joining the ideological offspring of AIER, the Brownstone Institute, as Senior Scientific Director. What is the Brownstone Institute, and what does this mean? I’ll get to that in a moment, but first I feel obligated to provide a little background. o § Education⠀➾ # ⚓ [Old] Losing_Your_‘Ed⠀⇛ In short, it seems that there has been a trend towards the dropping of -ed over time, or even skipping that stage entirely. # ⚓ Over_700_University_of_Michigan_faculty_sign_open_letter protesting_administration_witch_hunt_against_composer_and Professor_Bright_Sheng⠀⇛ The open letter from the UM faculty takes a principled stand in defense of Sheng, demanding that the university reinstate Sheng to his undergraduate course in composition and make a public apology both for the sanctions taken against him and the outrageous charges of racism. The letter correctly charges the university with violating academic freedom and fostering a climate of intimidation on campus. o § Hardware⠀➾ # ⚓ Vintage_Computers_With_A_Real_Turbo_|_Hackaday⠀⇛ In prior centuries, it was common practice to tie the operation of a program to a computer’s clock speed. As computers got faster and faster, the programs tied to that slower clock speed sometimes had trouble running. To patch the issue temporarily, some computers in the early 90s included a “TURBO” button which actually slowed the computer’s clock speed down in order to help older software run without breaking in often unpredictable ways. [Ted Fried] decided that he would turn this idea on its head, though, by essentially building a TURBO button into the hardware of old computers which would greatly increase the execution speed of these computers without causing software mayhem. # ⚓ Autonomous_Drone_Dodges_Obstacles_Without_GPS_|_Hackaday⠀⇛ If you’re [Nick Rehm], you want a drone that can plan its own routes even at low altitudes with unplanned obstacles blocking its way. (Video, embedded below.) And or course, you build it from scratch. Why? Getting a drone that can fly a path and even return home when the battery is low, signal is lost, or on command, is simple enough. Just go to your favorite retailer, search “gps drone” and you can get away for a shockingly low dollar amount. This is possible because GPS receivers have become cheap, small, light, and power efficient. While all of these inexpensive drones can fly a predetermined path, they usually do so by flying over any obstacles rather than around. # ⚓ Keep_Calm_And_Hack_On:_The_Philosophy_Of_Calm_Technology_| Hackaday⠀⇛ So much smart-tech is really kind of dumb. Gadgets intended to simplify our lives turn out to complicate them. It often takes too many “clicks” to accomplish simple tasks, and they end up demanding our attention. Our “better mousetraps” end up kludgy messes that are brittle instead of elegant and robust. The answer might not be faster or newer technology, but a 30-year-old philosophy. Some great thinkers at Xerox PARC, the place where, among other things, the computer mouse was invented, developed principles they called Calm Technology. o § Health/Nutrition⠀➾ # ⚓ Medical_Translation_Without_Trust⠀⇛ Adriana sat quietly looking at the floor with her young son, Pablo, beside he. She looked tired. The two had come in for a follow-up appointment for advice on Pablo’s autism medication. The clinician in the room did not speak Spanish, this family’s mother tongue, so they waited in a polite, mildly uncomfortable silence as a translator dialed in over the phone. The visit commenced. Questions were asked, answered in monosyllables; rinse, repeat. Finally, the young patient lifted his head: “Where’s Pilar?” This story was produced for Student Nation, a program of The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism dedicated to highlighting the best of student journalism. For more Student Nation, check out our archive or learn more about the program here. StudentNation is made possible through generous funding from The Puffin Foundation. If you’re a student and you have an article idea, please send pitches and questions to [email protected]. # ⚓ ‘Invisible_Toxic_Cocktail’_in_Tap_Water_Across_US_Due_to ‘Regulatory_Capture’:_Analysis⠀⇛ Millions of people throughout the United States “are unwittingly drinking water that includes an invisible toxic cocktail made up of contaminants linked to cancer, brain damage, and other serious health harms,” according to the Environmental Working Group, which updated its nationwide Tap Water Database on Wednesday. “Our government needs to wake up to the fact that clean water is a human right.” # ⚓ Democrats_Add_Weaker_Paid_Leave_and_Drug_Pricing_Plans_Back Into_Reconciliation⠀⇛ # ⚓ Progressives_Cautiously_Welcome_Drug_Pricing_Agreement_as ‘Something_to_Build_On’⠀⇛ Progressive U.S. lawmakers and healthcare reform campaigners on Wednesday cautiously welcomed Senate Democrats’ unanimous compromise agreement to allow Medicare to negotiate the prices of certain pharmaceutical drugs as a “positive step forward,” while stressing that much more must be done to protect Americans from Big Pharma price gouging. “This is real progress, and it gives Congress something to build on, setting us up to continue to take action that curbs the pharmaceutical industry’s greed and profiteering.” # ⚓ Sapiens_Author_Warns_That_Human_Brains_Could_Be_Hacked_if AI_Is_Not_Regulated⠀⇛ “To hack a human being is to get to know that person better than they know themselves. And based on that, to increasingly manipulate you,” Harari says. And warned that “It’s data about what’s happening inside my body. What we have seen so far, it’s corporations and governments collecting data about where we go, who we meet, what movies we watch. The next phase is surveillance going under our skin.” Speaking to Anderson Cooper of CBS, Harari commented on the way global data is handled and where exactly all of our data is stored. He added that “the world is increasingly kind of cut up into spheres of data collection, of data harvesting. In the Cold War, you had the Iron Curtain. Now we have the Silicon Curtain, that the world is increasingly divided between the USA and China, does your data go to California or does it go to Shenzhen and to Shanghai and to Beijing?” # ⚓ I_was_terrified_of_an_eyeball_injection⠀⇛ I’ve been a bit freaked out over the last couple of months. I needed to inject a medication directly into my eyeball. My. Damned. Eyeball! I’d never heard anyone talk about this procedure before, and I’d like to share my experiences. Maybe it can help you be less clueless about it than I was. It’s my 30-years-living-with-diabetes anniversary this year, and I’ve been diagnosed with diabetic retinopathy. It’s a long-term complication causing too many small blood vessels to form and begin to leak in the back of the eye. The prospects, if left untreated, are a gradual loss of sight and ultimately blindness. It’s treated by injecting a medication that stops new blood vessels from forming into the eye itself. It was a slow build-up to the actual diagnosis. My eye doctor was worried about the development in my left eye and referred me to a specialist clinic. A couple of weeks later, I received a letter informing me about the date and itinerary for my visit. At the bottom of the list, they’d included “and possibly an injection” with no further details. o § Integrity/Availability⠀➾ # § Proprietary⠀➾ # ⚓ ‘Sideloading_is_a_cyber_criminal’s_best_friend,’ according_to_Apple’s_software_chief⠀⇛ Federighi, who oversees Apple’s iOS and macOS software divisions, was specifically protesting the European Commission’s proposed Digital Markets Act, which, if passed, would require Apple to let users install apps outside of the iOS App Store. According to Federighi, the lack of sideloading is what separates Apple’s relatively low rate of malware on iOS from the “5 million Android attacks per month,” and that if Apple were forced to let users install their own apps, “the floodgates are open for malware.” # ⚓ Top_cyber_official_reports_‘decrease’_in_Russian cyberattacks_against_US_groups [iophk: Windows TCO]⠀⇛ Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security adviser for Cyber and Emerging Technology, told reporters at the White House in September that “discussions with the Russians continue,” and stressed that Biden is “looking for action with regard to addressing cyber activity.” # ⚓ Stop_spending_so_much_time_being_trolled_by billionaire_corporations!⠀⇛ However, mostly, the industry moved in a different direction. They took control of what you see and read. Brilliant engineers are hard at work making sure that you remain glued to your screen. So they find content that you may like and push it to you. Google closed Google Reader, decimating the RSS reader community. Whereas you could count on the Google search engine delivering the documents containing the keywords you are search, you are increasingly facing a curated list of links. We are back at a push model which is not unlike how things were when I was a kid. The likes of Twitter, Facebook and Google feel like they get to decide what I see. # ⚓ Dissecting_supply_chain_attacks_in_the_aftermath_of the_solarwinds_hack:_Who_will_guard_the_guards? [iophk: Windows TCO]⠀⇛ What has been labelled as one of the most advanced intrusion attacks in the past 20 years, has brought more questions than answers, but it has also given organisations a chance to reorient their security policies and move to an approach that embraces protection of identity and applications, while ensuring that their data is accessible, at its core, only to them. # § Security⠀➾ # ⚓ Features_of_Grype_Vulnerability_Scanner_For Container_Images_&_Filesystems⠀⇛ Note: Currently, Grype is built only for macOS and Linux. # ⚓ Chinese_hacking_contest_reveals_weaknesses_in iPhones,_Windows_and_other_tech_we_use_every day⠀⇛ Operating systems and software are put through thorough testing before public release. That doesn’t mean flaws don’t fall through the cracks. Hackers can exploit some of those flaws, forcing the developer to issue a quick update to patch them. Tap or click here for signs your device has been hacked. It is also not common for people who don’t work in the cybersecurity industry to discover these flaws. After all, they are professionals who have made it their job to root out vulnerabilities. So, when a hacking contest in China revealed significant problems in popular tech, it was a stark reminder that our devices are always at risk. # ⚓ Top_6_Vulnerability_Scanning_Tools_| LinuxSecurity.com⠀⇛ Computer systems, software, applications, and other network interfaces are vulnerable to various threats. Failure to find these vulnerabilities can lead to the downfall of the company. Hence, businesses conduct regular vulnerability assessments for their websites and networks to identify existing loopholes and weaknesses. The assessment results can help developers and network administrators understand the security issues and implement the necessary defensive measures against the potential threats. This article will go more in-depth on what a vulnerability scanner is. We’ll also provide six of the best open- source vulnerability scanning tools that are free and adaptable to various operating systems. # ⚓ Linux_Foundation_LFX:_secrets-in-code_down, DEI-inclusivity_up_–_Open_Source_Insider⠀⇛ The Linux Foundation has enhanced its free LFX Security offering. This is all about being able to give open source projects more ways to secure their code. Security comes in more than one form these days, so it’s also about reduce non-inclusive language. The LFX platform hosts community tools for security, fundraising, community growth, project health and mentorship etc. # § Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt/Fear-mongering/ Dramatisation⠀➾ # ⚓ On_“Trojan_Source”_Attacks⠀⇛ There is a paper making the rounds, with a slick accompanying web site, in which the authors describe a software supply chain attack they call “Trojan Source: Invisible Vulnerabilities”. In short, if you use comments containing Unicode LTR and RTL code points, which control whether text is rendered left-to- right or right-to-left, you can make code look different in a standard Unicode rendering than it does to a program ignoring the comments. The authors claim this is “a new type of attack” that “cannot be perceived directly by human code reviewers” and “pose[s] an immediate threat”, and they propose that compilers should be “upgraded to block this attack.” None of this is true. # § Privacy/Surveillance⠀➾ # ⚓ Surprising,_But_Important:_Facebook_Sorta Shuts_Down_Its_Face_Recognition_System⠀⇛ A month ago, I highlighted how Facebook seemed uniquely bad attaking a long term view and publicly committing to doing things that are good for the world, but bad for Facebook in the short run . So it was a bit surprising earlier this week to see Facebook (no I’m not calling it Meta, stop it) announce that it was shutting down its Face Recognition system and (importantly) deleting over a billion “face prints” that it had stored. # ⚓ Clearview_Finally_Submits_AI_For Independent_Testing;_Only_Tests_Feature_It Isn’t_Actually_Selling⠀⇛ At long last, Clearview has finally had its AI tested by an independent party. It has avoided doing this since its arrival on the facial recognition scene, apparently content to bolster its reputation by violating state privacy laws, making statements about law enforcement efficacy that are immediately rebutted by law enforcement agencies, and seeing nothing wrong with scraping the open web for personal information to sell to government agencies, retailers, and bored rich people. # ⚓ Zoom_to_start_showing_ads_to_some_free users⠀⇛ “Users will see a banner on Zoom’s website that provides a link that takes them to our cookie management tool,” the company added. The company said it has updated its Privacy Statement to account for this advertising programme. # ⚓ Facebook’s_facial_recognition_program_is shutting_down⠀⇛ Facebook announced on Tuesday (Nov. 2) that it is shutting down its facial recognition software program. The company has been using the technology for a decade—much to the concern of privacy advocates, civil liberties groups, and regulators—to identify individuals in photos. Facebook said it will delete facial recognition data entirely for 1 billion of its users over concerns about its potential misuse by governments and private actors. “There are many concerns about the place of facial recognition technology in society, and regulators are still in the process of providing a clear set of rules governing its use,” wrote Jerome Pesenti, vice president of artificial intelligence at Meta, Facebook’s parent company, in a blog post. He wrote there are some narrow use cases—like helping users into locked accounts—where Facebook will explore using the technology in the future, and publicly disclose those efforts. # ⚓ Yuval_Harari_warns_humans_will_be “hacked”_if_artificial_intelligence_is_not globally_regulated⠀⇛ Harari says the countries and companies that control the most data will control the world. [...] And he points out, the pandemic has opened the door to even more intrusive collection of our data. # ⚓ Facebook,_Citing_Societal_Concerns,_Plans to_Shut_Down_Facial_Recognition_System⠀⇛ The decision shutters a feature that was introduced in December 2010 so that Facebook users could save time. The facial-recognition software automatically identified people who appeared in users’ digital photo albums and suggested users “tag” them all with a click, linking their accounts to the images. Facebook now has built one of the largest repositories of digital photos in the world, partly thanks to this software. Facial-recognition technology, which has advanced in accuracy and power in recent years, has increasingly been the focus of debate because of how it can be misused by governments, law enforcement and companies. In China, authorities use the capabilities to track and control the Uyghurs, a largely Muslim minority. In the United States, law enforcement has turned to the software to aid policing, leading to fears of overreach and mistaken arrests. Some cities and states have banned or limited the technology to prevent potential abuse. o § Defence/Aggression⠀➾ # ⚓ A_US_Military_Jury_Is_Seeking_Clemency_for_a_Guantánamo Detainee⠀⇛ # ⚓ GOP_Moans_Over_Delay_on_$778B_for_Defense_While_Denouncing “Tax-and-Spend”_Bill⠀⇛ # ⚓ Remembering_Forgotten_Afghanistan⠀⇛ So, while this country has fled its shameful Afghan War, I, in some sense, am still there. That’s partly because I’ve kept in touch with Afghan women friends and colleagues, some living through the nightmare of the Taliban back again and others improbably here in America, confined in military barracks to await resettlement in the very country that so thoroughly wrecked their own. And after all these years, I’d at least like to offer some thoughts on the subject, starting with a little history that most Americans know nothing about. So be patient with me. War is never over when it‘s over. And it would be wrong to simply leave Afghanistan and its people in the dust of our disastrous departure. For me, at least, some thoughts are in order. # ⚓ Decolonizing_James_Bond⠀⇛ The cheeky insouciance was still there, but with Casino Royale that set the tone for the Craig era, it became clear such an attitude was a mask that hid a real man, not a caricature of one; a man who could and did, fall in love deeply and truly, was betrayed, and so developed the steely edges of the Bond mystique as a shield for  his very human vulnerabilities. A far cry indeed from the suave sexism perfected by the original Bond as played by Sean Connery, a role and image tweaked here and there with more or fewer of the nods and winks signaling the machismo that defined the Bond essence, but which  remained essentially intact over the almost half century of Bond mania before the baton was passed to Craig. But with the advent of this latest chapter in Bond history in 2006, the films began to reflect the changing zeitgeist of the 21st century, with Dame Judi Dench as head of MI6, a sexy black woman in the role of Money Penny who was no longer cast as a long-suffering secretary pining for her “James”— and in this final episode of the saga- we get yet another clear indication how far the world has changed by seeing Bond replaced by a 007 who is a sharp and sexy Black woman and M, though once again a man (played by Ralph Fiennes in the last few films)- is tired, old and as Bond quips, has become symbolically “smaller.” # ⚓ Crisis_in_Sudan_is_a_Lesson_for_the_U.S.⠀⇛ In “The Four Oxen and the Lion” Aesop tells of a powerful lion who prowls a field in search of a hearty meal. The four oxen who live there stand tail to tail and offer The Lion horns regardless of the direction of the approach. One day, however, an argument causes the the four oxen to go their separate ways. On their own the oxen do not stand a chance against the lion, who picks them off one by one with great ease. The moral of the story: united we stand, divided we fall. # ⚓ Cover-up_of_U.S._Nuclear_Sub_Collision_in_South_China_Sea: a_Wake-up_Call_for_East_Asia_–_and_the_World.⠀⇛ Fast forward to October 2, 2021, about one year later, and the first patch of grass has been stomped on by the U.S. elephant, trudging stealthily about, far from home in the South China Sea.  On that day the nuclear-powered attack submarine, the USS Connecticut, suffered serious damage in an undersea incident which the U.S. Navy ascribed to a collision with an undersea object. After sustaining damage, the submarine apparently surfaced close to the Paracel Islands which lie only 150 nautical miles from China’s Yulin submarine base in Hainan Province.   The Connecticut is one of only three Seawolf class of submarines, which are assumed to be on spying missions.  But they can be equipped with Intermediate Range (1250-2500 km) Tomahawk cruise missiles which can be armed with nuclear warheads.  It is claimed that they are not so equipped at present because the Navy’s “policy decisions” have “phased out” their nuclear role, according to the hawkish Center For Strategic and International Studies. # ⚓ Google’s_reportedly_bidding_to_be_a_military_cloud provider⠀⇛ The contract Google is reportedly looking into is one that will open to multiple companies to submit proposals and do work for, and the DoD estimates it could be a multi-billion dollar project. In a document describing what cloud providers will be expected to do, the DoD says that anyone hoping to win a contract will have to “enable access to crucial warfighting data” with a variety of classification levels (including Secret and Top Secret info). Additionally, the program requires that applicants be able to “provide advanced data analytics services that securely enable data-driven and timely decision-making at the tactical level.” # ⚓ The_West’s_China_Complex:_Beijing_as_the_Enemy_and_the Savior⠀⇛ This is one of numerous reports appearing in recent weeks in Western mainstream media, all motivated by recently published economic indicators pointing to less-than-expected growth in various sectors of the Chinese economy, especially in the field of construction. It is understandable that the volatility of global markets could instigate immediate concern among economists worldwide, especially when the economic output of a country the size of China – the world’s overall fastest-growing and second-largest economy – stalls, however briefly. o § Environment⠀➾ # ⚓ Is_the_Global_Methane_Pledge_Just_“Words_on_Paper”?⠀⇛ This column is part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration cofounded by Columbia Journalism Review and The Nation to strengthen coverage of the climate story. # ⚓ Opinion_|_The_Limits_of_Economic_Growth_and_the_Climate Crisis⠀⇛ Since the nineteenth century, human society has experienced extraordinary but uneven economic growth thanks to the energy unleashed from fossil fuels. That growth, and the greenhouse gasses released from fossil-fuel use, has also created the current climate crisis. The conventional solution put forward to this crisis, a putative compromise between economic and environmental imperatives, has been to maintain economic growth but on the basis of sustainable energy sources. # ⚓ Climate_change_grips_trout_streams_across_the_nation:_How anglers_are_responding⠀⇛ An angler of 20 years, McCool has done this more times than he can count. He never tires of the sensation. The clear waters of the Au Sable, which courses across 138 miles of northern Michigan forest, is one of the country’s renowned places to cast a fly. It’s a river so revered as a trout fishery that in 1959 a group of Au Sable fisherman formed Trout Unlimited, now the country’s premier advocacy organization to protect cold-water streams in Michigan and nationwide. # ⚓ Niinistö:_Finland_to_nearly_double_climate_financing_to developing_countries⠀⇛ Finland, he revealed, will almost double its climate financing for developing countries and promote the integration of climate action to national budgeting in its capacity as co-chair of the Coalition of Finance Ministers for Climate Action. The country paid a total of 147 million euros in climate finance to developing countries in 2019, according to the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. “Many truly impactful measures lie in this domain,” he stated. # ⚓ Why_We_Need_Environmental_Justice_at_the_Heart_of_Climate Action⠀⇛ # ⚓ Green_Party_condemns_“voluntary_carbon_markets”_as_Empire 2.0⠀⇛ Molly Scott Cato, Green Party Finance and Economy speaker and former MEP, said:  # ⚓ Uproot_the_System:_Filipina_Activist_Mitzi_Tan_on_How Capitalism_&_Colonialism_Fuel_Climate_Crisis⠀⇛ We speak to Mitzi Tan, a climate activist based in the Philippines, who will join Greta Thunberg of Sweden and Vanessa Nakate of Uganda in speaking at a major march and rally in Glasgow on Saturday. Among their demands are reparations from the Global North to the Global South to help rebuild the lives of those most impacted by the climate crisis. Tan has recently protested outside the offices of Standard Chartered Bank in London, which funds the most fossil fuel companies based in the Philippines, which she says contributes directly to their yearly typhoons that cause insurmountable destruction. “At this point, none of us have a choice. We all have to join the struggle of the most marginalized,” says Tan. # ⚓ Hurricane_LUMA:_Puerto_Ricans_Fight_Big_Coal_&_Privatized Energy_Amid_Climate_Disasters,_Blackouts⠀⇛ As we cover the fight against Big Coal with climate activists attending the U.N. climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, we look at the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico, which has experienced some of the most extreme weather over the last two decades. Hurricane Maria destroyed the island’s electrical grid four years ago and left residents in the dark for months. The fragile power system is still unreliable for people, prompting mass protests and renewed calls for lawmakers to move away from dirty power and turn the island into a center for renewable energy, a movement featured in the new film “El poder del pueblo,” or “The Power of the People.” We speak with lawyer and environmental justice advocate Ruth Santiago, who is featured in the film and is a member of the White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council. She lives near Puerto Rico’s largest fossil fuel-burning power complex, that includes the U.S.-owned AES coal plant known as La Carbonera in the municipality of Guayama — home to many of the island’s Afro-Puerto Rican residents. She discusses how they are organizing to expand rooftop solar energy projects amid worsening power outages under the new private consortium LUMA, which she says people now refer to as “Hurricane LUMA.” # ⚓ These_11_Climate_Science_Deniers_are_Attending_the_COP26 Climate_Summit⠀⇛ GLASGOW, SCOTLAND — A total 11 climate science deniers have secured passes to the UN COP26 climate summit taking place in Glasgow, Scotland, including Myron Ebell, the head of former US President Donald Trump’s transition team at the Environmental Protection Agency. The president of the notorious Heartland Institute, which recently held a rival conference in Las Vegas ahead of the COP26 conference, and the head of policy at the UK’s principal climate science denial group are also among those who were given badges. # ⚓ COP26:_What_It_Will_Take_to_be_a_Success⠀⇛ No recent COP, perhaps no summit of any consequence in recent years, has even been held under such ominous conditions. Moreover, no host of such a summit has ever been so unwilling to accept and react to the conditions under which this Summit is being held. Nevertheless, both Boris Johnson and Patricia Espinosa, the Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC have continuously stated that success is possible. If that is true, the success of COP26 will be measured by whether States achieve some minimum goals in the areas of ambition, mitigation, adaptation, loss and damage, finance, and participation. # ⚓ Brazil_Climate_Delegation_Includes_Meat_Giants_Linked_to Deforestation,_Despite_Country’s_Pledge_to_Protect_Forests⠀⇛ Representatives of major Brazilian meat companies linked to Amazon deforestation are among delegates representing the country at the COP26 climate summit. Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro was among over 100 countries to announce a “landmark” pledge to protect forests on Tuesday at the climate conference, promising to end deforestation by 2030.   # ⚓ Kumi_Naidoo_at_COP26:_Will_Rich_Countries_Deliver_Pledged Billions_for_South_Africa_to_Get_Off_Coal?⠀⇛ On day three of the U.N. climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, we look at the fight against Big Coal, starting with leading South African climate activist Kumi Naidoo. South Africa is one of the world’s largest coal producers, and the United States has joined the European Union and other wealthy nations to announce a new deal to provide $8.5 billion to the country to help it decommission its coal plants and invest in renewable energy. “Let’s see if the money actually flows and if those countries actually follow up with that commitment,” says Naidoo, global ambassador for Africans Rising for Justice, Peace and Dignity and the former head of Amnesty International and Greenpeace. He says the deal puts pressure on the South African government to “ensure a just transition and make the right investments in wind, solar and other clean energy technologies.” # ⚓ Showing_‘Green_New_Deal_Is_a_Winning_Issue,’_Michelle_Wu Wins_Boston_Mayoral_Race⠀⇛ “The Green New Deal is only becoming more and more popular and we’re so excited that we’re seeing its implementation across the country, from all levels of our society.” “Truly wonderful climate news.” # ⚓ Opinion_|_COP26_Must_Address_Plastic_Pollution⠀⇛ # ⚓ Climate_Scorecard_Shows_Insurance_Industry_‘Pouring Gasoline_on_the_Fire’⠀⇛ A new analysis of how the insurance industry is managing its policies related to fossil fuels and the climate crisis reveals that major U.S. insurers continue to underwrite “the reckless expansion of oil and gas infrastructure.” “With the climate in crisis, U.S. insurers are pouring gasoline on the fire,” tweeted the Insure Our Future campaign. # ⚓ Opinion_|_COP26:_Can_a_Singing,_Dancing_Rebellion_Save_the World?⠀⇛ The climate crisis has exposed this system’s structural inability to act in the real interests of humanity, even when our very future hangs in the balance.      # ⚓ ‘Greenwashing_=_Murder’:_Climate_Movement_Marches_Against Polluters’_Lies_in_Glasgow⠀⇛ Climate campaigners took to the streets of Glasgow on Wednesday to denounce industry-fueled greenwashing efforts they charge are rampant within the COP26 climate summit now taking place in the Scottish city. “I’m marching to take a stand against all companies harming the planet while offering inexcusably skewed perceptions of themselves.” # § Energy⠀➾ # ⚓ ‘Act_of_Piracy’:_Iran_Claims_It_Thwarted_US_Attempt to_Steal_Oil_in_Gulf_of_Oman⠀⇛ Iranian forces reportedly foiled an attempt by the United States Navy to capture a tanker in the Gulf of Oman and seize its oil, an alleged ploy that Iran’s Press TV characterized as an “abortive act of piracy.” Without specifying when the events took place, Iran’s IRNA news agency reported Wednesday that the U.S. confiscated “an Iranian oil tanker in the Sea of Oman, transferred its oil to another tanker, and [moved] the tanker to an unknown place.” # ⚓ Hidden_Agenda:_the_Unspoken_Argument_for_More_Nuclear Power⠀⇛ So here we are again at another COP (Conference of the Parties). Well, some of us are in Glasgow, Scotland at the COP itself, and some of us, this writer included, are sitting at a distance, trying to feel hopeful. But this is COP 26. That means there have already been 25 tries at dealing with the once impending and now upon us climate crisis. Twenty five rounds of “blah, blah, blah” as youth climate activist, Greta Thunberg, so aptly put it. # ⚓ South_Africa_secured_$8.5_billion_to_transition_away from_coal._It’ll_be_a_test_case.⠀⇛ “This is a big deal,” said Jesse Burton, an energy policy researcher and senior associate at the University of Cape Town and E3G, a research group that focuses on climate change. “It’s a major test of whether wealthy nations can help developing countries embark on a just transition away from coal.” South Africa, the world’s 15th-largest emitter, relies overwhelmingly on coal, which supplies 87 percent of the nation’s electricity. While the country has pledged to reduce its overall carbon dioxide emissions between now and 2030 as part of global efforts to tackle climate change, it faces enormous obstacles in doing so. # ⚓ A_15-year-old_girl_invented_a_solar_ironing_cart that’s_winning_global_respect⠀⇛ And so the Iron-Max was born. It’s a blue- painted cart shaped like an iron box with solar panels fitted on its roof. It’s attached to a bicycle to allow vendors to move through the neighborhood to collect clothes to press. Five hours of bright sunshine is enough to operate the iron for six hours. The energy can be stored in a battery to provide power on cloudy days. The cart also has a coin-operated cellphone and a cellphone charging point where people can pay to recharge their phones to supplement vendors’ earnings. Umashankar and her solar-powered ironing cart are now getting global recognition. On Tuesday, she gave a powerful 5-minute speech at COP26, the U.N.’s climate change summit in Glasgow, Scotland, in which she urged world leaders to stop talking and start acting. She reminded them about how monumental their actions would be for her generation. # ⚓ How_cement_may_yet_help_slow_global_warming⠀⇛ The place to start is where emissions are greatest. Cement production begins with the quarrying of limestone, the main component of which is calcium carbonate (CaCO3). This is mixed with clay and passed through a rotating kiln at more than 1,400ºC in a process called calcination. The heat drives off the carbon and part of the oxygen, which combine to form CO2. The remaining lumps, called clinker, are made of molecular complexes of calcium oxide and silica, known collectively as calcium silicates. The clinker is then cooled and milled into cement. More than half the emissions involved in cement-making are a consequence of calcination, and most of the rest result from burning coal and other fossil fuels to power the process (see chart). All told, nearly one tonne of CO2 is released for every tonne of cement made. # § Wildlife/Nature⠀➾ # ⚓ Can_the_Wolf_Unite_Us?_Environmental_Leadership_in Polarized_Times⠀⇛ The urgency of “the wolf situation” in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Wisconsin – though one could enlarge that list – has pushed reflection on how contemporary society might alternatively relate to the awe- inspiring apex predator, the grey wolf. That evocation, then, opens onto the more generalized one of how we might create a new environmentalism. As I have lived the entirety of my adult life in the northern reaches of the Rocky Mountains of the United States, and more specifically in Montana, I will speak from that embodied knowledge, but its greater geographic applicability will be obvious. First, the wolf. # ⚓ Conservationists_Challenge_Massive_Deforestation Project_in_Boise’s_Most_Popular_Recreation_Area⠀⇛ The Sage Hen project encompasses nearly 67,800 acres (106 square miles!) and involves commercial logging on nearly 20,000 acres, prescribed burning on 35,000 to 45,000 acres, and bulldozing up to 83.1 miles of roads in Boise’s most popular recreation area. Yet, despite the enormous size of the project, the Forest Service did not disclose where the logging, the new logging roads, or prescribed burns would take place. That’s a significant concern since the landscape and watersheds in this vast area provide a great diversity of essential wildlife habitat due to the broad range of existing native vegetation and a large roadless wildland area. This habitat diversity is reflected in the many sensitive species, migratory bird species, and other wildlife that occupy the area. o § Finance⠀➾ # ⚓ Sanders_Slams_Democrats’_Tax_Break_for_the_Wealthy_as “Beyond_Unacceptable”⠀⇛ # ⚓ Thumbs…_Up:_Kyrsten_Sinema’s_Hometown_of_Tucson_Approves $15_Minimum_Wage_by_Nearly_2-to-1_Margin⠀⇛ Just months after her now-infamous thumbs-down vote on a similar measure at the federal level, the people of U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s hometown of Tucson, Arizona overwhelmingly approved a ballot initiative on Tuesday to increase the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. According to unofficial results posted by the city, Proposition 206 passed with approximately 60% of the vote compared to roughly 32% who rejected it. # ⚓ Latin_America_Should_Pull_Out_of_the_World_Bank’s Corporate-Dominated_Trade_Court⠀⇛ In September, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), a regional bloc founded in 2010 as an alternative to the U.S.-backed Organization of American States (OAS),  met in Mexico City — its first summit since 2017. As José Steinsleger, a writer for Mexico´s La Jornada newspaper, puts it, “the initiative was made possible thanks to state leaders’ conviction that, without unity, Latin America is doomed to keep digging the economic and social hole it’s in.” # ⚓ How_Wealth_Inequality_Spiraled_Out_of_Control⠀⇛ We must stop this vicious cycle — and demand an economy that works for the many, not one that concentrates more and more wealth in the hands of a privileged few.  # ⚓ These_Billionaires_Received_Taxpayer-Funded_Stimulus_Checks During_the_Pandemic⠀⇛ In March 2020, as the first wave of coronavirus infections all but shut down the U.S. economy, Congress responded with rare speed, passing a $2.2 trillion relief package called the CARES Act. The centerpiece of the law was an emergency payment to over 150 million American households that needed help. Congress used a simple filter to determine who was eligible for assistance: The full $1,200 was limited to single taxpayers who’d reported $75,000 a year or less in income on their previous tax return. Married couples got $2,400 if they had reported less than $150,000 in income. Money was sent automatically to those who qualified. o § AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics⠀➾ # ⚓ Left_Coalition_Says_McAuliffe_Campaign_Was_a_‘Controlled Experiment_for_What_Not_to_Do_in_2022′⠀⇛ A coalition of progressive advocacy organizations warned Wednesday that conservative Democrat Terry McAuliffe’s failed gubernatorial bid in Virginia offers a cautionary lesson for the rest of the party ahead of next year’s midterms: Either excite voters with a bold agenda or risk losing power to the GOP. “Give people something to vote for or watch yourselves become the very thing they resoundingly vote against.” # ⚓ Those_Indecent_Republicans⠀⇛ It didn’t take long before someone tagged me with the name Dickybird, Dickie being a nickname for Richard. Of course, the other kids thought the strange-sounding name was a hoot, and Dickybird I was. Nicknames stick. Now President Joe Biden has become a target of a singularly mean epithet, and I don’t mean Donald Trump’s label for him as “sleepy.” # ⚓ Democratic_Incumbent_Governor_Murphy_Squeezes_Out_Win_in New_Jersey⠀⇛ # ⚓ Voters_Will_Punish_Democrats_If_They_Don’t_Deliver_on_Their Promises⠀⇛ # ⚓ ‘Time_Is_Really_Running_Out’:_Democrats_Urged_to_Counteract GOP’s_Gerrymandering_Spree⠀⇛ As redistricting kicks into full gear and GOP- controlled states follow Texas’ anti-democratic playbook this week by advancing congressional and state legislative maps that would disenfranchise communities of color and cement Republican power for at least a decade, voting rights advocates are once again urging Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill to swiftly pass federal legislation to reverse partisan gerrymandering and voter suppression laws. “Democrats… could soon be powerless to stop the GOP’s takeover of the U.S. House and state Capitols for the next decade.” # ⚓ Opinion_|_Democrats_Have_a_Choice:_Embrace_Progressive Populism_or_Suffer_a_Trumpian_Fascist_Future⠀⇛ Populism was the big winner in the Virginia election yesterday, after Terry McCauliffe ran on his past as a Bill Clinton Democrat and Glen Youngkin ran as a rightwing populist. As Glen Abernathy noted this morning in The Washington Post: # ⚓ ‘We’re_Going_to_Beat_Rand_Paul’:_Charles_Booker_Files_for US_Senate_Run_in_Kentucky⠀⇛ Progressive Democrat Charles Booker on Wednesday formally filed candidate paperwork to run against Republican U.S. Sen. Rand Paul in Kentucky next year. “We need leadership at the federal level that cares about our lives.” # ⚓ Opinion_|_Time_Is_Running_Out_to_Protect_Voting_Rights⠀⇛ President Biden and the Democratic leadership have spent months focusing their energy on getting infrastructure legislation passed. The time has come to pivot to focus the nation’s attention on our constitutional infrastructure and protecting our right to vote. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is currently setting the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act for a floor vote, in a final attempt to garner bipartisan support for a suite of voting rights infrastructure bills that have included the For the People Act and most recently, the Freedom to Vote Act. # ⚓ Dems_Told_to_Kill_Filibuster_After_All_Senate_Republicans But_One_Block_John_Lewis_Voting_Rights_Bill⠀⇛ Calls mounted Wednesday for U.S. Senate Democrats to reform or abolish the filibuster after all but one of the chamber’s Republicans blocked yet another voting rights bill. “We can protect our democracy, or we can preserve the filibuster.” # ⚓ Senators_Offer_Solution_as_Progressives_Warn_SALT_Repeal Would_Be_‘Colossal_Mistake’⠀⇛ As congressional Democrats consider repealing the Trump-era $10,000 cap on the state and local tax deduction, the advocacy group Progressive Millionaires joined a pair of U.S. senatorss Wednesday in warning against a move the organization says would “overwhelmingly benefit wealthy Americans.” “No millionaire should be getting a tax cut from this reconciliation bill.” # ⚓ The_World_That_Will_Greet_David_Gilbert⠀⇛ Gilbert was in the getaway vehicle from the infamous Brink’s robbery in 1981 in Nyack, New York. During that robbery and in its immediate aftermath, two Nyack police officers and a security guard from the Brink’s armored car were killed. He and several of his fellow revolutionaries were apprehended shortly after the robbery took place, a robbery that was discovered by chance by a person gazing out of their window near the armored car heist. Gilbert was defiant when apprehended and at his trial and was given a sentence that would have meant he would have been eligible for parole in 2056, in what would have amounted to a death sentence. He killed no one during and after the robbery. New York law states that an accessory to this kind of felony is as culpable as those who committed murder during the crime. The revolutionaries in this robbery planned to fund revolutionary activities. Photos of Gilbert in police custody following his apprehension show his swollen and bruised face. The Brink’s robbery was an action carried out by white leftist revolutionaries and Black leftist revolutionaries. Gilbert has been a model prisoner during his imprisonment, serving other inmates. The US, however, never sought rehabilitation after the bipartisan-driven murder of between three to five million people in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, with over 58,000 from the US dead and Cold War anti- communism in place. No post-World War II reparations were ever provided to those nations in Southeast Asia. # ⚓ Colin_Kaepernick,_the_Virginia_Elections,_and_the_Canary_in the_Coal_Mine⠀⇛ Anything that involves Colin Kaepernick sends GOP officials and their alt-right trolls into a frenzy. Anything that involves speaking about the historical US system of chattel slavery and reminds people of its institutional dehumanization is now immediately grouped under the umbrella of “critical race theory” and makes these same people froth at the mouth. Therefore, it should surprise no one that a clip of Colin Kaepernick comparing the NFL draft combine to a slave auction has sent right- wingers into a rage. # ⚓ Virginia_Gubernatorial_Winner_Encapsulates_the_Worst Elements_of_the_Modern_GOP⠀⇛ # ⚓ Opinion_|_Corporate_Democratic_So-Called_“Centrists”_Lost These_Races,_But_They’ll_Never_Admit_It⠀⇛ Terry McAuliffe ran Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign in 2021, but the Virginia voters who went for Clinton in 2016 weren’t buying it this time around. McAuliffe’s attempt to make the election a referendum on Donald Trump was a failure since Trump wasn’t on the ballot. After ten months of Democratic government in Washington, voters saw little action that improved their lives. # ⚓ Progressives_on_Virginia_Loss:_Corporate_Democrats_Have Only_Themselves_to_Blame⠀⇛ After Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe—a conservative whose campaign was flush with billionaire cash—fell to Republican private equity mogul Glenn Youngkin in Virginia’s closely watched gubernatorial race on Tuesday, establishment Democrats wasted no time pinning the blame on progressives. The finger-pointing started days before the polls opened in Virginia, a state that has trended blue in recent years and that President Joe Biden won by 10 percentage points in 2020. # ⚓ Lessons_From_Virginia:_You_Can’t_Ignore_the_Civil_War⠀⇛ Terry McAuliffe’s defeat in Virginia shows what happens when you are in a war, and only one side fights. The raging battle over whether America is primarily a white nation or whether it is a multiracial democracy continues to define US politics, and we now have painful proof that Democrats’ approach of ignoring the attacks and trying to change the subject to non-racial topics is woefully inadequate. # ⚓ Virginia_Is_a_Wake-Up_Call_for_Democrats_Before_the Midterms⠀⇛ I saw Virginia’s November election results on a cool September night in Virginia Beach, but I didn’t want to believe what I was seeing. # ⚓ Preliminary_Note_on_the_State_of_Virginia⠀⇛ # ⚓ The_U.S._is_Showing_the_World_that_Democracy_Doesn’t_Work⠀⇛ This has been a familiar theme with Biden. In August, after the U.S. Senate passed the bipartisan infrastructure bill (which is still awaiting House approval), he made a similarly grandiose statement: “This deal signals to the world that our democracy can function, deliver, and do big things.” Biden protests too much. # ⚓ The_Nation’s_John_Nichols:_Democrats_Must_Deliver_on Promises_or_Voters_Will_Punish_the_Party⠀⇛ We speak with The Nation’s John Nichols about key outcomes from Tuesday’s election night. In a major blow for Democrats, Republican Glenn Youngkin, who President Biden warned is an extremist in the vein of former President Trump, won the Virginia governor’s race against former Governor Terry McAuliffe. Youngkin campaigned for so-called parents’ rights — a catch-all phrase adopted by right-wing opponents of vaccine and mask mandates, transgender rights and critical race theory. Tuesday’s elections also saw closely watched races in New Jersey, New York City, Buffalo and Boston, where Michelle Wu made history by becoming the first woman and first person of color elected as mayor. Nichols says disappointing results for Democrats are tied to the party’s infighting in Washington and the inability to pass major legislation despite holding the White House and Congress: “You can’t fail to deliver on your promises and then expect to win elections. And that’s a big message for Democrats.” # ⚓ Remote_control:_Who’s_in_charge_of_your_media_life?⠀⇛ The deeper questions are around how television content is changing our lives and whether it’s for better or worse. On the news side, we worry about disinformation, minimalist reporting of local and international news and a shrinking audience along with a growing sense that people watch only news that reinforces their deeply held opinions. In a California study, the impact of people watching FOX News led to a shift in voting behavior toward the Republican Party without consideration of options. On the entertainment side, we worry about misshaped cultural norms and the impact on our brains. Europeans are questioning the adverse effects of television on behavior and thought. In a study from Norway and Italy, the impact of watching only entertainment resulted in lower IQ scores. # ⚓ ‘On_the_edge_of_a_cliff’:_What_voting_rights_tell_us_about US_democracy⠀⇛ Earlier this year, I wrote about Georgia’s past and present when it comes to voting rights. Last month the Brennan Center for Justice reported that, so far in 2021, at least 19 states have enacted 33 laws that make voting harder – primarily in states where voting was already fairly difficult. Overall, in this year’s legislative sessions, more than 425 bills restricting voter access have been introduced in 49 states. # ⚓ My_thoughts_on_the_Cybersecurity_and_Cybercrime_Bill⠀⇛ TL;DR — Downloading movies, music and pirated software becomes a crime under this Bill. Failing to moderate online content will also become a crime. Service providers can be compelled to provide access to data and forced not disclose anything. Want to know more then read on! # ⚓ Democrats_Can’t_Fail_to_Govern_and_Expect_to_Win⠀⇛ A comprehensive explanation for a deeply disappointing night in the first big test of Democrats’ fortunes since the 2020 election gave the party control over the White House and Congress must incorporate an understanding of emerging Republican strategies and failed Democratic responses. But it cannot neglect the fact that Democrats in Washington have bungled the past several months. Their failure to govern boldly—and effectively—has cost them dearly. # ⚓ Are_Nicaraguan_Migrants_Escaping_‘Repression’—or_Economic Sanctions?⠀⇛ “Record numbers” of migrants are coming into the United States from Nicaragua, according to Newsweek (7/29/21), which blames the increase on “arbitrary arrests and human rights abuses” by the Nicaraguan government. Former Sandinista leader Sergio Ramírez, writing for El Salvador’s El Faro (8/20/ 21), claims that “repression” by President Daniel Ortega’s Sandinista government is causing a “dramatic growth” in migration by Nicaraguans. # ⚓ Meet_the_Nicaraguans_Facebook_Falsely_Branded_Bots_and Censored_Days_Before_Elections⠀⇛ MANAGUA, NICARAGUA (The Grayzone) — Just days before Nicaragua’s November 7 elections, top social media platforms censored top Nicaraguan news outlets and hundreds of journalists and activists who support their country’s leftist Sandinista government. # ⚓ Lawmakers_Call_for_Immediate_Action_at_Chicago_Shelter Housing_Afghan_Children⠀⇛ Lawmakers have called for immediate action and a federal investigation into the “mental health crisis” among young Afghan evacuees at a Chicago shelter for unaccompanied immigrant children, where workers say that language and cultural barriers have made it difficult to provide adequate care. Sen. Dick Durbin, a Democrat and Illinois’ senior senator, asked the Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general to investigate the situation at a shelter run by the nonprofit Heartland Alliance. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, also an Illinois Democrat, called on HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra to have the department’s Office of Refugee Resettlement improve mental health services at the shelter. o § Misinformation/Disinformation⠀➾ # ⚓ The_Whole_YouTube_Radicalizes_People_Story_Doesn’t_Seem_To Have_Much_Evidence_To_Back_It_Up⠀⇛ There seem to be a lot of “myths” about big internet companies that don’t stand up to that much scrutiny, even as they’re often accepted as common knowledge. There’s the idea that Facebook’s algorithm remains in place only because it makes Facebook more money (Facebook’s own internal research suggests otherwise), or that disinformation goes viral on social media first (a detailed study showed cable news is a much bigger vector of virality). # ⚓ Facebook_‘Puts_Engagement_and_Growth_Before_the_Health_and Welfare_of_Democracy’⠀⇛ Janine Jackson interviewed Free Press’s Tim Karr about challenging Facebook for the October 29, 2021, episode of CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript. # ⚓ Researchers_say_a_coordinated_misinformation_campaign_on Twitter_backed_Kenya’s_president.⠀⇛ Last month, reporting on newly disclosed financial documents showed that Kenya’s president, Uhuru Kenyatta, and members of his family were linked to 13 offshore companies with hidden assets of more than $30 million. The findings, part of the leaked documents known as the Pandora Papers, initially generated outrage online among Kenyans. But within days, that sentiment was hijacked on Twitter by a coordinated misinformation campaign, according to a new report published by the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation. The effort generated thousands of messages supporting the president, whose term is ending, and criticizing the release of the documents. “Like clockwork, an alternative sentiment quickly emerged, supporting the president and his offshore accounts,” said Odanga Madung, a fellow at Mozilla and an author of the report. “Kenyan Twitter was awash in Pandora Paper astroturfing,” he said. # ⚓ Tucker_Carlson’s_‘Patriot_Purge’_Is_Too_Crazy_to_Believe_— and_Too_Dangerous_to_Ignore⠀⇛ The conceit of Patriot Purge is that the real “Americans” — the country’s greatest Patriots — were those who went to Washington on January 6 to join what was to be a peaceful rally protesting the supposed stealing of the 2020 US Presidential Election. They were a multi-racial group of patriotic Americans coming to the capital to voice their concerns. But then Antifa, apparently working in tandem with the FBI, disrupted the peaceful protests with agents provocateurs who urged participants into the capital building. The seditious “deep state” has in this way entrapped the country’s warriors, who are now the subject of government targeting that was honed during the War on Terror. o § Censorship/Free Speech⠀➾ # ⚓ Appeals_Court_Doesn’t_Seem_To_Like_Much_About_A_Criminal Defamation_Law_Police_Used_To_Arrest_A_Critic⠀⇛ Three years ago, cops in New Hampshire arrested Robert Frese for the crime of… insulting some cops. Frese, facing a suspended sentence for smashing the window of a neighbor’s car, left a comment on a local news site, claiming Exeter Police Chief William Shupe was a “coward” who was “covering for dirty cops.” # ⚓ Roku_is_booting_Pornhub_and_cutting_off_other_private channels⠀⇛ The company announced last week that it would be removing so-called “non-certified channels” by March of 2022. The change comes as Roku introduces new tools for developers, including a new independent developer kit that operates separately from its primary software developer kit for commercial-use channels. It also announced that it’s launching new beta testing capabilities that will allow app makers to run tests on their apps before making the changes live on the service. o § Freedom of Information/Freedom of the Press⠀➾ # ⚓ 12_journalists_killed,_230_became_victims_of_violence_in Afghanistan_last_year:_Report⠀⇛ Journalists in Afghanistan have been complaining over the incidents of beating, insulting, and violence against them. They claim that such cases have risen since the Taliban takeover. Press freedom and access to information have also been curtailed, according to Afghan journalists, according to Khaama Press. o § Civil Rights/Policing⠀➾ # ⚓ Supreme_Court_Reform_Commission_Delays_Final_Report Publication_to_December_15⠀⇛ # ⚓ India_Walton’s_Mayoral_Defeat_in_Buffalo_Sets_Dangerous Precedents_for_the_Left⠀⇛ # ⚓ SCOTUS_Likely_to_Allow_Challenge_to_Texas_Law,_But_May Still_Overturn_“Roe”⠀⇛ # ⚓ ‘Black_Lives_Matter,’_Says_Merkley,_Voting_With_Markey Against_Rahm_Emanuel_Ambassadorship⠀⇛ Progressive U.S. Sens. Ed Markey and Jeff Merkley on Wednesday came out in opposition to Rahm Emanuel’s nomination as United States ambassador to Japan, with Merkely citing the former Chicago mayor’s record—which includes trying to cover up the 2014 police murder of Black teen Laquan McDonald—as the reason for his decision. “Black Lives Matter,” Merkley (D-Ore.) explained in a statement. “Here in the halls of Congress, it is important that we not just speak and believe these words, but put them into action in the decisions we make.” # ⚓ Major_Police_Overhaul_Goes_Down_in_Minneapolis,_But_Austin and_Cleveland_Advocates_Notch_Wins⠀⇛ “Regardless of tonight’s outcome, there’s broad agreement that Minneapolis residents want more tools for public safety. There’s also consensus that the status quo is not an option.” The grassroots group Black Visions Collective applauded the “historic” Yes on 2 campaign, which helped push nearly 44% of Minneapolis voters to support Question 2 after launching a petition to demand the question be included on the ballot. # ⚓ Ordering_food_on_an_app_is_easy._Delivering_it_could_mean injury_and_theft⠀⇛ A recent survey of 500 delivery workers conducted by the Worker’s Justice Project and Cornell University found that more than half have had an accident or crash while doing a delivery. Three in four delivery workers said they paid for medical care from a work-related injury out of their own pocket. Half said they have had their bikes stolen. Now, during late night shifts, delivery workers cross bridges in large packs to ward off would-be thieves, Ajche said. In the first nine months of 2021, ten delivery cyclists have died, according to the Worker’s Justice Project. That includes one who died after a hit and run in Brooklyn and another worker who was stabbed to death. # ⚓ A_relic_of_Jim_Crow:_Tipping_has_overstayed_its_welcome⠀⇛ As someone who lives abroad, I received a piece of soon-to-be important advice before coming to campus: Be prepared to tip everywhere. I was told that it was because the minimum wage was lower for certain professions like waiting tables — a policy choice made with the misplaced hope that tips from customers made up the difference. The uniquely American institution of tipping was jarring. Despite being forewarned, it still came as a bit of a culture shock when I was prompted to tip before receiving a service. Gratuity was still supposed to be in exchange for good service, right? How am I supposed to know before the service has been rendered? These questions were swirling in my head. But hey, when in Rome, do as the Romans do. Even so, I decided to read up on this decidedly American custom. I was taken aback to find that tipping was considered “un-American” in the past according to Kerry Segrave’s book “Tipping: An American Social History of Gratuities.” Confused? So was I. o § Internet Policy/Net Neutrality⠀➾ # ⚓ Who_Controls_the_Internet?_And_should_they?⠀⇛ Why do I tell you this stuff? In this presentation I’m going to spread a lot of love or mostly hate on various countries and various companies and on how they run the [Internet]. And I want you to be sure that you know I’m only speaking on behalf of myself and on behalf of no one else. During this time as an open source developer and a government worker, I have seen quite a bit of the [Internet] and who may be controlling it or not. So who controls the [Internet]? We all have our dreams, our hopes, our heroes on the [Internet], but also our favorite enemies of the [Internet]. o § Digital Restrictions (DRM)⠀➾ # ⚓ Nintendo’s_YouTube_Video_For_Its_Switch_Online_Upgrade_Is Its_Most_Hated_Video_Ever⠀⇛ Well, this is moving fast. We had just been discussing Nintendo’s announcement for a new tier of Nintendo Switch Online services. While there are several extras added in for the $50 per year tier, a 150% increase in cost from the base subscription, the real star of the show was supposed to be the Nintendo 64 games that are now included in it. As we discussed, however, the list of N64 games on offer is very limited and there are all kinds of problems with the games that are offered. Those problems include graphical issues, scaling issues, controller lag issues, controller mapping issues, and multiplayer lag. You know… everything. When you put all of that side by side with Nintendo’s concentrated efforts to obliterate emulation sites from the internet, the end result is that Nintendo decided to deprive the public of pirated classic games in order to sell them a vastly inferior product. o § Monopolies⠀➾ # § Copyrights⠀➾ # ⚓ Open_Minds_Podcast:_Tyler_Green_of_The_Modern_Art Notes_Podcast⠀⇛ In this episode, CC’s Ony Anukem sits down for a conversation with award-winning author, historian and art critic, Tyler Green. Tyler is also the producer/host of The Modern Art Notes podcast, described by The Washington Post as “one of the great resources for all art lovers.” Tyler is an avid Creative Commoner, and since launching the podcast in 2011, it has been released, licensed CC BY- NC-ND 3.0. # ⚓ OnlyFans_‘Models’_Drop_Piracy_Liability_Lawsuit Against_Cloudflare⠀⇛ Niece Waidhofer, Ryuu Lavitz and OMGcosplay have dropped their lawsuit against Cloudflare. The OnlyFans creators accused the CDN provider of facilitating access to photos that leaked on the now-defunct Thothub website. The reason for the dismissal is unknown, but recent legal developments may have played a role. # ⚓ Pirates_Seem_Happy_to_Trust_Applinked_But_Caution_May Be_Advised⠀⇛ Following the closure of the popular Filelinked service at the hands of the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment, those looking to easily install piracy apps on Android devices turned to alternatives. One of those is Applinked, a similar tool that has attracted an enthusiastic audience. But should services like this be taken simply on trust or is a greater level of caution advised? # ⚓ How_AI_is_Hijacking_Art_History⠀⇛ Or, at the very least, media outlets have come to realize that news of “mysteries solved” and “hidden treasures revealed” generate traffic and clicks. So I’m never surprised when I see AI-assisted revelations about famous masters’ works of art go viral. # ⚓ Google_News_Returning_To_Spain,_As_Awful ‘Inalienable’_Snippets_Tax_Is_Replaced_With_Marginally Less_Awful_EU_Copyright_Directive⠀⇛ Back in 2014, Spain brought in a Google tax. It was even worse than Germany’s, which was so unworkable that it was never applied fully. Spain’s law was worse because it created a right for publishers to be paid by “news aggregators” that was “inalienable”. That is, publishers could not waive that right — they had to charge. That negated the point of Creative Commons licenses, which are designed to allow people to use material without paying. Subsequent research showed that Spain’s snippet tax was a disaster for publishers, especially the smaller ones. ╘══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╛ ¶ Lines in total: 5959 ➮ Generation completed at 02:40, i.e. 15 seconds to (re)generate ⟲