We retired this podcast, because we couldn't parse it for 10 consecutive times.
Date | Title & Description | Contributors |
---|---|---|
2017-07-06 | The guys into a great discussion about text editors and everything it takes to develop in the open source community. We also have a guest this week, Welcome Wes! |
|
2017-06-26 | Do you think your distribution matters anymore? Is Souls ready for Mat the developer? (Sorry for poor audio this week, promise I will fix next week) |
|
2017-06-20 | The guys get into a good debate about proprietary software and the people who create it. IS the software unethical, are the creators unethical? The guys dig in deep on this one. |
|
2017-05-16 | This week the guys discuss their thoughts on news that Canonical is prepping to enter the stock market. Did we see it coming? Does it make sense? Do they stand a chance against other powerhouses. RHEL... |
|
2017-05-01 | With all the commotion around Ubuntu and everything that Microsoft is doing related to open source just makes you wonder if Microsoft and Mark Shuttleworth have bigger plans. |
|
2017-04-18 | Not just for Canonical but for the Penguin Punch Podcast it is in fact a new beginning. Check out the new format of the show. Let us know what you think. |
|
2017-02-24 | In a article written by Ryan Sipes of System 76 Ryan makes the case that we should all get behind Unity 8. The guys discuss the article and give their own spin on Unity 8 and Canonical as a company. |
|
2017-02-12 | This week the guys re-visit a topic they have discussed before. Is the software you rely on a product or a project. From distro's to creative software what constitutes weather a application is developed enough to be considered a product or a project. |
|
2017-01-29 | How GNU are you? The guys discuss how dedicated to using only GNU software they are and, whether to be an open source advocate you must only use GNU software. |
|
2017-01-13 | In this first episode of 2017 the guys get to discuss what they think it will take for Linux to achieve enough marketshare to in fact call it the year of the linux desktop. The whole discussion leads to a very odd determination. |
|