lwn-podcast

Audio version of LWN.net articles. Maintained by third party, not related by LWN.net. Web-scrapping and audio conversion is done by the opensource project https://github.com/0xba1a/lwn-podcast

Finer-grained kernel address-space layout randomization

A new KASLR proposal surfaces

02-29
09:48

Debian discusses how to handle 2038

Now that the kernel work to support 32-bit systems past 2038 is mostly   done, what will be required to get Debian into shape?

02-27
11:46

Browsers, web sites, and user tracking

A Chrome tracking feature creates consternation.

02-15
07:25

How to contribute to kernel documentation

A new kernel document on how to make kernel   documentation better.

02-10
22:51

Fedora gathering requirements for a Git forge

What, if anything, should replace Pagure in the Fedora   project's workflow?

02-08
10:43

Cryptography and elections

Making   elections secure and fair is harder than it seems.

02-06
23:07

Poker and FOSS

Bradley Kuhn   explores the intersection of online poker playing and free software.

01-25
14:38

The dark side of expertise

A linux.conf.au keynote on when our expertise can blind us

01-23
15:08

Brief Items 9-Jan-2020

Brief news items from throughout the community.

01-21
08:24

A medley of performance-related BPF patches

BPF is being sped up in a number of ways.

01-20
07:15

Removing the Linux /dev/random blocking pool

Kernel developers give up on providing "true" random numbers.

01-19
09:17

Brief items - 02-Jan-2020

Brief news items from throughout the community.

01-14
08:36

Fedora and fstrim

Should Fedora systems run fstrim by default?

01-11
06:50

LWN's 2020 vision

Our traditional selection of unlikely predictions for the coming year.

01-09
08:23

Brief items - 19-Dec-2019

Brief news items from throughout the community.

01-04
07:12

A year-end wrap-up from LWN

Reviewing our January predictions and closing out the year.

01-04
08:36

Explicit pinning of user-space pages

Another baby step toward a solution to the problems with get_user_pages().

01-04
06:25

Buffered I/O without page-cache thrashing

Combining the convenience of buffered I/O with the performance of direct I/O.

01-03
05:20

One million ought to be enough for anybody

A proposal for arbitrary limits on several Python parameters.

01-03
13:55

Fedora and optical media testing

By Jake Edge December 18, 2019

01-03
10:54

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