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  • Hands-on with the Turing Pi 2!

    The Turing Pi 2 is quite an exciting project that might even be a game-changer when it comes to homelab. With it, you can set up Raspberry Pi Compute Modules as individual servers, and even cluster them! The Turing Pi 2 gives you access to many additional features that Compute Modules wouldn’t normally have access to, such as mPCIe, SATA, and more. This gives you access to build a data-center in a box, and Jay gives it a first-look on the channel in this video.

    YouTube player

    Relevant links

    Check out the Turing Pi 2

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    Read more: Hands-on with the Turing Pi 2!
  • Enterprise Linux Security Episode 15 – High Availability

    It’s frustrating when critical infrastructure encounters an issue that results in a disruption of service. High Availability is a concept that aims to help alleviate (or hopefully eliminate) such downtime, and is a very attractive goal for system administrators. In this episode, Jay and Joao discuss high availability, as well as its pros and cons.

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    • Ogg version
    • MP3 version
    • MP3 version (low)

    Related articles

    • Log4Shell evolution of evasion patterns
    • Log4Shell Variants and updates

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    Read more: Enterprise Linux Security Episode 15 – High Availability
  • Getting Started with OpenSSH Key Management

    In various tutorials throughout the history of LearnLinuxTV, we’ve gone over the importance of using public keys with OpenSSH. But what do you do when you have multiple clients you work with, how do you manage keys between them? In this video, we’ll go through an example scenario where we have three clients, and we need to maintain multiple SSH keys for each.

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    Read more: Getting Started with OpenSSH Key Management
  • The Homelab Show Episode 40 – The Turing Pi 2

    Happy New Year! In their first podcast of 2022, Jay and Tom talk about the Turing Pi 2. The Turing Pi 2 is a mini-ITX board that supports up to four Raspberry Pi Compute Modules and/or Nvidia Jetson modules, effectively giving you a “data center in a box”. Check out this episode for some thoughts on how this might be a game changer for homelab.

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    Read more: The Homelab Show Episode 40 – The Turing Pi 2
  • Resetting OpenSSH Host Keys (the easy method)

    When creating a deployment image or template for distributing Linux to devices or servers, it’s a good idea to make sure that you reset the host keys for SSH. In this video, I’ll show you an easy method I found for automating this.

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    You can find the systemd unit file I used in the video here.

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    Read more: Resetting OpenSSH Host Keys (the easy method)
  • Checking out Pop!_OS 21.10 on the Raspberry Pi

    With the recent release of Pop!_OS 21.10, a version for the Raspberry Pi was also released. In this video, I’ll check out the new Pi spin and give you my thoughts.

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    Read more: Checking out Pop!_OS 21.10 on the Raspberry Pi
  • Enterprise Linux Security Episode 14 – Recovering from Disasters

    Disasters in the world of tech are frustrating for everyone, not just the company that experienced the incident. In this episode, Jay and Joao discuss thoughts around what it actually means to recovery from a disaster, and why it’s typically not a quick process.

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    • MP3 version (low)

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    Read more: Enterprise Linux Security Episode 14 – Recovering from Disasters
  • The Log4Shell Vulnerability, and CrowdSec’s Community Response

    TheLog4Shell vulnerability is taking the Internet by storm, and it’s already being used for real-world attacks. In this video, Jay discusses the details around Log4Shell vulnerability in Log4j, and also CrowdSec’s community-based response to the situation.

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    Relevant links:

    • CVE information
    • Rapid7 article
    • Tech Republic Article (includes test script)
    • DataDog article
    • Github IP list for this CVE
    • CrowdSec pull request #311
    • CrowdSec YAML code
    • CrowdSec http-cve collection

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    Read more: The Log4Shell Vulnerability, and CrowdSec’s Community Response
  • Enterprise Linux Security Episode 13 – Log4Shell

    The Log4Shell vulnerability is making its rounds all over security news sites, and with good reason – it’s quite easy to execute. In this episode, Jay and Joao discuss the vulnerability that exists within log4j, as well as some ways to keep your server safe.

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    Read more: Enterprise Linux Security Episode 13 – Log4Shell
  • Enterprise Linux Security Episode 12 – An Inside Job!

    Earlier this year, Ubiquiti allegedly suffered a breach, which seemed to reinforce the hesitation some customers have with using the UniFi platform, given that it has a cloud-connected controller. Now, months later, an unexpected bombshell was dropped – it looks like the company wasn’t compromised by an outside attacker after all, recent developments seem to point to the whole fiasco being an inside job!

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    Check out this story on The Verge.

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    Read more: Enterprise Linux Security Episode 12 – An Inside Job!
  • Pop!_OS 21.10 – Full Review!

    Released on December 14th, Pop!_OS 21.10 is built on the latest Ubuntu base, and features a new application library feature. In this review, I’ll show off the new release, and give you my thoughts.

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    Read more: Pop!_OS 21.10 – Full Review!
  • Enterprise Linux Security Episode 11 – CrowdSec

    CrowdSec is a free application you can run on your Linux server, which provides an additional layer of security. CrowdSec aims to prevent intrusions and other forms of malicious activity, but it does it in a different way – it utilizes intelligence gathered from other users in order to enhance its protection. In this episode, Jay and Joao discuss CrowdSec with Philippe Humeau, the CEO of the project.

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    • MP3 version (low)

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    Read more: Enterprise Linux Security Episode 11 – CrowdSec
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