Episode 106: Destination Linux EP106 – Privacy Parrots
On this episode of Destination Linux, we do a follow up for security and penetration testing with the latest release of Parrot OS from Parrot Security. We also discuss some beta release from the KDE Plasma team with Plasma 5.15 Beta and Canonical’s Multipass 0.5 Beta. Then we talk about some news from Inkscape, Purism, Tutanota, and Firefox. Later in the show, we’ll check out the Kickstarter for a potential new prototyping design tool, Akira and then some Linux Gaming news. All that and much more including our Tips, Tricks and Software Spotlight picks!
Help Us Get Zeb to SELF via the Zeb to America GoFundMe:
https://destinationlinux.org/zebtoself
Sponsored by: do.co/dl
Hosts of Destination Linux:
Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com
Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com
Zeb, aka Zebedeeboss = https://youtube.com/zebedeeboss
Noah of Ask Noah Show = http://asknoahshow.com
Want to Support the Show?
Support on Patreon
Order Destination Linux Apparel
Want to follow the show and hosts on social media?
You can find all of our social accounts at destinationlinux.org/contact
—
Topics covered in this episode:
Parrot 4.5 Released
Plasma 5.15 Beta Released
Multipass Is Now Out Of Private Beta
Inkscape 092.4 Released
Purism Announces PureOS Store
Tutanota Gets Desktop App
Akira Design Tool Coming To Linux
Firefox Test Pilot Going Away
Humble Bundle Caffeine (#affiliate link)
While True: learn()
—
Software Spotlight:
Mstream – Create your own personal music streaming service
Tips & Tricks:
Lynx – Lynx is a text browser for the World Wide Web
W3m – w3m is a text-based web browser as well as a pager like \`more’ or \`less’. With w3m you can browse web pages through a terminal emulator window (xterm, rxvt or something like that). Moreover, w3m can be used as a text formatting tool which typesets HTML into plain text.The best overall for ease of use. Type w3m and the link you want to browse to.
Browsh – Browsh is a fully-modern text-based browser. It renders anything that a modern browser can; HTML5, CSS3, JS, video and even WebGL. Its main purpose is to be run on a remote server and accessed via SSH/Mosh or the in-browser HTML service in order to significantly reduce bandwidth and thus both increase browsing speeds and decrease bandwidth costs.