Displaying 2 items of LINUX Unplugged with the tag "tunarr".
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661: Sink Your Claws In
April 5th, 2026 | 1 hr 4 mins
agent governance toolkit, agent harness, agentic ai risks, ai, ai agent, ai infrastructure, ai privacy, ai workflow, big tech ai bots, chrome devtools protocol, claude code, declarative configs, distributed gpu, gemma 4, git, google deepmind, google workspace, goose, hermes-agent, html-to-markdown, jupiter broadcasting, librefang, linux podcast, linux unplugged, llm, lm studio, lobehub, lubelogger, mesh llm, microsoft’s agent governance toolkit, nextcloud, nixos, open agent harness, open coding model, open source, open source ai, open source llm, open source maintainers, open source model, openclaw, opencode, openharness, proton, secure boot, self-hosting, self-improving ai agent, single-file-cli, skim, tunarr, unattended bots, webpage to html, zoho
The expensive, challenging, and humbling journey with open source agents.
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660: Boots and Breakups
March 29th, 2026 | 57 mins 6 secs
/boot, 10-bit hevc tng, age verification, ai orchestration, alby hub, ampere, bios, bitcoin node, boothole, bootloader, bore, btrfs, busybridge, cage kiosk, calendar, calendar sync, chromebooks, computer upcycle, dispatcharr, ersatztv, ersatztv next, ext4, ffmpeg, filesystems, greenboost, grub, hardware acceleration, hardware-accelerated transcoding, hevc, homelab, iptv, jellyin, jupiter broadcasting, kdeconnect, kdeconnect-sms-tui, linux podcast, linux unplugged, linuxfest northwest, luks, lvm, media center, minimal grub, miramichi nb, multi-node ai orchestration platform, nixbook, odroid, olympia mike, open source, openclaw, planify, plex, quicksync, raid, secure boot, self-hosted, shim, sms tui, star trek, systemd-boot, the computer upcycle project, this week in bitcoin, tng broke the machine, tpm, tunarr, turnstone, tv channels, twib, ubuntu, ubuntu 26.10, ubuntu installer, uefi, zfs
Ubuntu wants a leaner, stricter GRUB, and your favorite setup may not survive the cut. We break down what’s really changing, and the practical ways to adapt. Plus, Chris moves on from one of his favorite open source apps.