During and after dinner, Andrew talks about struggles with setting up VPNs, and Steve reads some Linux trivia, then both enjoy some Pittsburgh Dad.
Episodes
1,384 episodes · Page 11 of 28
After talking about happenings around town, Steve and Andrew talk about RASPBERRY!, GE, Microsoft, SSH, CSS, Linux, password breaches, and full server encryption.
Brian, Brandon and Ryan discuss great slides from Apple's security experts, more Docker koolaid, a Facebook chat bot, plus, we have new Twitter followees!
Brian works on the Nexus CLI tool and we all would love nice cameras.
Among other things, Roxie throws up in the studio in the middle of an episode recording.
Savannah Haslow, Andrew Bailey, and Ian R Buck discuss transportation and public transit.
Steve talks about how his Ubuntu broke (not Windows 10), Andrew explains how one would remotely unlock a booting server, Steve downloads his Google takeout, and live blogs on The Fringe, then finds out why no one expects the Spanish Inquisition.
After Steve has problems spelling "dual", he and Andrew talk about working, interviews, RASPBERRY, Microsoft, Mozilla, encryption, Inbox.com, KeePass plugins, and other tidbits.
In the middle of talking about things, Andrew talks about the music on the podcast, Steve looks at the things you can do without JS, then talk about SSH.
In the middle of summer, Andrew and Steve talk about old consoles, space, Microsoft, documentation, HTTPS, CSS, and time tables.
Ian R Buck and Brian Mitchell discuss transportation and cycling.
Before the show, Ryan, Ian and Brian chat for a while.
After the show, Ian notices changes in the studio.
Ian R Buck and Betsy Dadabo review the Pebble Time and Pebble Time Round, and discuss the next generation of time.
Andrew explains his allergies, Steve updates his laptop, and then mention the Brexit.
Steve and Andrew catch up on a few things, like RASPBERRY!, .NET, Seafile, and Windows 10 (Andrew had an adventure!)
After talking about cicadas and The Raphael Parable, Andrew and Steve talk about putting things on Github, Raspberry!, Firefox, Microsoft, ransomware, and headphones.
Brian Mitchell and Ryan Rampersad discuss the annual WWDC 2016 keynote: watchOS, tvOS, macOS and iOS - all new!
Before the WWDC special, Ryan and Brian wonder, "where's the hardware?"
Brian, Brandon and Ryan discuss blogs, and some new work, plus a follow up on Open Source North, as well WWDC news and final predictions and Twitter Followees!
Brandon tries to remotely print to Brain's printer and Ryan discusses work things of course!
Ryan, Brian and Brandon discuss what they have been working on, some agile experiences, SIGNAL 2016, new Twitter followees and so much more!
Ryan shares all sorts of great Java-knowledge!
On this short and sweet episode, Andrew talks about getting runner's high, Steve talks about printing and having a tong, then both discuss implications of Oracle vs Google.
Double Feature: Our thoughts and experiences with Gboard for iOS and Google Keyboard for Android.
Brian, Brandon and Ryan discuss the last few weeks of Brian's college life and his new website and blog, Brandon's new blog, Ryan's new domain, the new MacBook and our intense desire for a new MacBook Pro, a query in React world, and of course, our Twitter followees.
We talk microphones, mixers, and audio, virtual machines, and some planning on reinstalling a Digital Ocean server.
Ian R Buck and Ryan R Rampersad sit down for their annual Google I/O discussion: Google Assistant, Home, Allo and Duo, N, VR and more!
It's Chris's birthday! Steve is amazed by infrared cameras, Andrew poses a hypothetical Apple scenario, then both talk about hard drives, IOT destruction, new hardware, Certbot, the NSA, Ubuntu, 3D printers, and a time table app.
Andrew shows off Twentieth Century's new heatsink, and Steve wonders what exactly is 1984.
Steve has a suggestion about the Dremel, Chris crashes, and Andrew talks about Linux distros.
Andrew and Steve talk about 3D printers, cameras, Dell, Ubuntu, Lavabit, Backblaze, Bitcoin, Clapper, Comey, and the T.
Ian R Buck, Brandon Johnson and Ryan Rampersad secretly planned to attend Brian Mitchell's Senior Seminar Presentation at the University of Minnesota Morris on Saturday morning. This is a short variety episode from a few hours later of our meetup.
Andrew wonders where the recorded files are and plays with the Dremel, and Steven stays calm.
After briefly becoming the bike show, Steven and Andrew talk about gaming history, betas, Intel, Google, Paul Le Roo, IoT, and passwords.
Ian R Buck and Ryan Rampersad discuss the complex world of advertising and ad blocking.
Ian and Ryan discuss the new Nexus 6P in the studio, among other things.
Before the show, @tech4789 turns into @_BrianMitchell_!
Chris talks a lot, then falls asleep, and eventually leaves, while Andrew cooks food, and Steve tries to scan QR codes.
Andrew and Steve talk about the stuff that Microsoft announced at Build, how NodeJS broke everything, why IoT is a bad idea, ciphers, and broken iPhones.
PodKit returns with Ryan, Brian and Brandon discussion Ryan's new work, Puppet and ZSH, Microsoft's surprise BASH at BUILD, iOS colors and more!
A really silly experiment by Ian R Buck.
Steve enjoys the food, and Andrew talks about Diablo.
Steve and Andrew talk about old times, new places, RASPBERRY!, stolen databases, vulnerabilities, encryption, iPhones, offline webpages, and some philosophy.
Ryan, Brian and Brandon discuss Apple's Special Spring Event: EncrypTIM, EnvironmenTIM, watch straps, iPhone SE and iPad Pro.
The after show is fantastic, with a sort-of-PodKit like experience!
Ian R Buck, Ryan Rampersad and new Nexus Device owner Ian Decker discuss the essential settings and features of Android, and some of the essential apps you definitely need to investigate.
Ian arrives early to check out Android N.
Andrew and Steven play with the echoy acoustics in Andrew's new, mostly empty apartment, then figure out how to speed test his new 150 megabit FIOS, only to be thwarted by every laptop having 100 megabit NICs.
Andrew tells Steve about moving in, then about Raspberry!, CHIP, SSDs, Microsoft, DROWN, Amazon, encryption, and some more web server optimizations.