This episode I speak with Jon Edvald of Garden about their cloud native automation platform. I also c
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January 29 · Issue #91 · View online
A weekly geeky squeak.
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This episode I speak with Jon Edvald of Garden about their cloud native automation platform. I also cover Linux on the M1, Google Chrome, Web extensions on Safari, and more! xx Chinch
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Cloud Native automation with Jon Edvard of Garden by The Weekly Squeak • A podcast on Anchor
This episode I speak with Jon Edvard of Garden about their cloud native automation platform.
I also cover Linux on the M1, Google Chrome, Web extensions on Safari, and more!
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Cloud Native automation with Jon Edvard of Garden
This episode I speak with Jon Edvard of Garden about their cloud native automation platform. I also cover Linux on the M1, Google Chrome, Web extensions on S…
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Episode 104 - Romans, painting, Egyptian detectives, and hitchhiking space journalists
Rebecca, Chris, and Jason are joined by Michael Hopwood to consider Romans painting swords, Egyptian detectives, and far flung journalists trying to find a story. Will the games we create be total nonsense, or race to the top of the hotness lists?
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The Solo Adventurer - A letter writing RPG with Quill
Join me as a write a letter in an attempt to get the best response I can. Intrigued?
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Google to cut off other Chromium-based browsers from access to services such as Sync
Google plans to revoke others’ Chromium-based browsers’ access to a long list of APIs that power such popular services as bookmark and settings synchronization. Access to what Eisinger labeled “our private Chrome APIs” will be blocked starting March 15.
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Safari 14 added WebExtensions support. So where are the extensions?
Library Extension helps you find library books, but it doesn’t work on Safari—yet.At WWDC 2020, Apple announced it was going to support Chrome-style browser extensions (the WebExtensions API) in Safari.
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Ubuntu Linux is now running on M1 Macs
For the first time, users of Apple Silicon Macs using Apple’s M1 chip—such as the entry-level 13-inch MacBook Pro, Mac mini, and MacBook Air—can now boot in to and natively run Linux.
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Elastic changes open-source license to monetize cloud-service use
Elastic is tackling Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) with its new license change. When Elastic, makers of the open-source search and analytic engine Elasticsearch and its companion data visualization dashboard Kibana, announced it was moving both programs’ source code from the Apache 2.
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The Essentials: The Films Of John Carpenter [Full Retrospective]
After the slasher-heavy aughts and the found-footage saturation of the early-2010s, it seems we have finally entered a new era of prestige horror.
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Linux distributors frustrated by Google's new Chromium web browser restrictions
While Google Chrome is easily the most popular PC web browser, it’s open-source big brother, Chromium, doesn’t have that many users, but it’s always had some fans on desktop Linux. Now, though, that love affair is in trouble.
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