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    hg

    Explore " hg" with insightful episodes like "S1 EP:16 Amanda Banks - Born At Home Film, Acupuncturist, Homebirth (X2), Miscarriage, HG, Private Midwife, Hospital Transfer, Oesophageal Atresia, NICU", "S1 EP:15 Alyssa - Three Births, Doula, Hospital Birth, Induction, AROM, Homebirth (X2), HG, Water Birth, Precipitous Labour.", "S1 EP: 11 Bernadette Lack (B) Midwife, Homebirths, Two Births, Threatened Preterm Labour, Incontinence, Pelvic Floor", "116 - Toxic CEO" and "115 - Revisiting "A Kayak Mission In China" Story" from podcasts like ""Homebirth Stories Australia", "Homebirth Stories Australia", "Homebirth Stories Australia", "Hamburger Generation | جيل الهمبرجر" and "Hamburger Generation | جيل الهمبرجر"" and more!

    Episodes (19)

    S1 EP:16 Amanda Banks - Born At Home Film, Acupuncturist, Homebirth (X2), Miscarriage, HG, Private Midwife, Hospital Transfer, Oesophageal Atresia, NICU

    S1 EP:16 Amanda Banks - Born At Home Film, Acupuncturist, Homebirth (X2), Miscarriage, HG, Private Midwife, Hospital Transfer, Oesophageal Atresia, NICU

    Today we chat to Amanda Banks who is the co-producer (with Eleanor Currie) of the new film, Born At Home. Amanda chats to us about why she wanted to create a film about homebirth, the benefits of acupuncture in pregnancy and her two homebirth experiences. 

    After having a straightforward birth at home with her first baby, her son was unresponsive and needed to be transferred to hospital. Her son was born with Oesophageal Atresia which meant he needed surgery and a 6 week stay in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). After having two miscarriages, Amanda fell pregnant with her daughter and had a quick birth and a healing postpartum where she was able to be tucked into her own bed by her private midwives. 

    Links for Amanda:

    Links to Born At Home film:

    Other:




    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    S1 EP:15 Alyssa - Three Births, Doula, Hospital Birth, Induction, AROM, Homebirth (X2), HG, Water Birth, Precipitous Labour.

    S1 EP:15 Alyssa - Three Births, Doula, Hospital Birth, Induction, AROM, Homebirth (X2), HG, Water Birth, Precipitous Labour.

    Today we interviewed Alyssa Booth (Doula & Birth Educator) from Cherish Birth who shares with us her three birth stories. Alyssa gave birth to her first baby in the hospital system, where she experienced a positive induction where they broke her waters (PROM).  For her next two births, she birthed her babies quickly in the comfort of her own home.

    We also chat to Alyssa about the work that Better Births Illawarra have done to improve better facilities within the hospital as well as pushing for the expansion of midwifery-led care/continuity of care (MGP) within the region. We also discuss the Birth Trauma Inquiry that is currently running in NSW.

    Links for Alyssa:

    Other:

    Birth Trauma Links:

    Where to find help:

    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    S1 EP: 11 Bernadette Lack (B) Midwife, Homebirths, Two Births, Threatened Preterm Labour, Incontinence, Pelvic Floor

    S1 EP: 11 Bernadette Lack (B) Midwife, Homebirths, Two Births, Threatened Preterm Labour, Incontinence, Pelvic Floor

    Today we interviewed Bernadette (B).  B takes us through the pregnancy and birth of her two sons.

    B shares with us the many different jobs she has had throughout her career as a midwife - working in MGP, Homebirth programs, small and tertiary hospitals , overseas, as well as providing care for women in rural and remote communities in Australia.

    B currently runs her business Core & Floor Restore, which provides people with core and pelvic floor programs. She also co-owns Motheration and is the co-host of The Great Birth Rebellion Podcast.

    Links:

    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    116 - Toxic CEO

    116 - Toxic CEO

    Today's storyteller is Farah.

    Farah shares with us her journey of moving from the Middle East to Germany and all the challenges of dealing with a, not-so-nice to be around, CEO

    This recording was between Farah and hosted by Jamil.

    Happy Listening Burgers!

     

    Please share this episode with a friend through the link below:
    https://kite.link/116-toxic-ceo

     

    If you LOVE the Hamburger Generation then please consider supporting us for as little as $2 to unlock hidden stories and claim other awesome benefits!
    HG Patreon Link: https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration

    115 - Revisiting "A Kayak Mission In China" Story

    115 - Revisiting "A Kayak Mission In China" Story

    We are reliving one of the classic Moe Abuzayed stories on Hamburger Generation, "A Kayak Mission in China" 

    If you were listening clearly we reference this story in the previous episode "114 - Crossing the Isthmus", so we thought we'd republish it for your listening pleasure.

    Fun fact, as of today this is the story with the highest number of listens on Hamburger Generation.

    Happy Listening Burgers!

     

    If you LOVE the Hamburger Generation then please consider supporting us for as little as $2 to unlock hidden stories and claim other awesome benefits!

    HG Patreon Link: https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration

    S1 EP: 10 Ashley Winning (2) Three births, Caesarean (X2), Uterine Tear, Special Scar, HG, GD, PTSD, HBA2C, FreeBirth.

    S1 EP: 10 Ashley Winning (2) Three births, Caesarean (X2), Uterine Tear, Special Scar, HG, GD, PTSD, HBA2C, FreeBirth.

    Today we chat to Ashley Winning about her 3 birth experiences.

    Ashley encountered many challenges being larger bodied and birthing within the hospital system with her first 2 babies. With her first baby, Ashley had a failed induction where her care providers pushed for a caesarean.  Ashley became more informed and set out to have a VBAC with her second baby. Ashley went into labour spontaneously, but her care providers failed to wait for her body to birth on its own timeline- which led to a caesarean, uterine scar, 3.1L bleed and PTSD. 

    When Ashley became pregnant with her third baby, she set out to have a homebirth. When Ashley couldn’t find a care provider that aligned with her wishes, she decided to Freebirth her 4.5kg baby at home.


    Ashley Winning


    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    S1 EP:7 Rhonda - Three Births, Hospital Birth, Previous Trauma, Long Induction, Birth Trauma, Free Birth (X2).

    S1 EP:7 Rhonda - Three Births, Hospital Birth, Previous Trauma, Long Induction, Birth Trauma, Free Birth (X2).

    Today we interview Rhonda who had 1 hospital birth followed by 2 Freebirths. 

    Rhonda talks about her long traumatic induction within the hospital system with her first birth. Due to this experience, she became more informed and decided that she didn't want to birth within the system again. 

    Rhonda discusses how she decided to Freebirth her next two babies as she was unable to afford a private midwife at the time (no publicly funded homebirth programs in QLD). 


    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    111 - New HG New Me

    111 - New HG New Me

    A new chapter of Hamburger Generation is beckoning upon us!

    Jamil announces his new journey in his life .. but what will happen to the podcast?!

    Isra talks about her upcoming performances IN PALESTINE!

    Happy Listening Burgers!

    If you LOVE the Hamburger Generation then please consider supporting us for as little as $2 to claim awesome benefits!
    HG Patreon Link: https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration

    109 - Madeline's Journey to Her Dad

    109 - Madeline's Journey to Her Dad

    Today's storyteller is Madeline who is on a unique journey of self-discovery and adventure riding her bike across continents!

    You might notice that Isra (co-host of Hamburger Generation) is not in this episode, that is because she was out of the country and rest assured she will return in our next episode.

    Happy Listening Burgers!

    https://www.instagram.com/iammadelinehoffmann/
    https://thejourney2myself.travel.blog/
    https://www.warmshowers.org/
    https://www.couchsurfing.com

    If you LOVE the Hamburger Generation then please consider supporting us for as little as $2 to claim awesome benefits!
    HG Patreon Link: https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration

    Martha shares her birth story - KICBUMP with Martha Kalifatidis

    Martha shares her birth story - KICBUMP with Martha Kalifatidis

    We all fell in love with Martha when she appeared on MAFS back in 2015, and since then we've been following her wonderful and very entertaining relationship with Michael Brunelli on social media where Martha has gained quite a significant following.

    Martha and Michael have just welcomed their beautiful baby boy Lucius, and for the first time publicly, Martha shares in today's KICBUMP episode her birth story and how Michael was throughout the whole process! She also opens up about the debilitating illness hyperemesis gravidarum that she had during her whole pregnancy, explaining it as one of the darkest times of her life.

     

    Kic UPDATE:

    We launched our halfway hustle challenge last month and if you missed out we're offering you a VERY special offer - you can get one month of our all inclusive wellness app for FREE! That means access to over 700 workouts, 700 recipes and 100 meditations, plus 7 different programs including run, strength and HIIT, equipment free and pre & post natal. Sign ups must be through our website kicapp.com on a monthly subscription, hit ‘GET STARTED FREE’ and complete the promo code KICPOD1MONTH

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    S1 EP: 2 Laura - First Time Mum, Homebirth, Hypnobirthing, Nausea, HG, Vomiting, Water Birth.

    S1 EP: 2 Laura - First Time Mum, Homebirth, Hypnobirthing, Nausea, HG, Vomiting, Water Birth.

    Today we chat to our host Laura about her first pregnancy and birth.

    Laura is a first time mum who decided to give birth to her son at home. After becoming well informed and educated about the outcomes for women in all models of care, Laura made the decision to hire a private midwife. Although Laura's pregnancy journey was tough with severe nausea and vomiting, Laura experienced a positive physiological first birth at 38 + 1 weeks.

    Be sure to hit the subscribe button so our podcast downloads straight to your inbox!

    Links
    Birth photographer - https://instagram.com/lifelaidbarephotos?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==


    Support the show

    @homebirthstoriesaustralia

    Please be advised that this podcast may contain explicit language. Listener discretion is advised.

    The information, statistics, and research presented in this podcast are for informational purposes only and are not intended to constitute or replace medical or midwifery advice. All information discussed can be found online and is provided in the links in the show notes. It is always recommended to conduct your own research and make informed decisions. We advise you to discuss any topics or concerns with your healthcare provider. While we strive to incorporate the most up-to-date research in our episodes, we do not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of the information discussed on the show.

    Dawn Marriott: Private Equity, People and Culture

    Dawn Marriott: Private Equity, People and Culture

    Dawn Marriott is a  partner and head of the Portfolio Team at Hg. Hg is a leading European investor in software and services, focused on backing businesses that change how we all do business.

    Deep technology expertise, complemented by vertical application specialisation and dedicated operational support, provides a compelling proposition to management teams looking to scale their businesses.

    Hg has funds under management of over $55 billion, with an investment team of over 160 professionals, plus a portfolio team of around 50 operators, providing practical support to help our businesses to realise their growth ambitions.

    Based in London, Munich, New York, Paris and San Francisco, Hg has a portfolio of around 50 software and technology businesses, comprising over 85,000 employees across the UK, US and Europe. 

    We talked about:

    • Leaving school at 16
    • Telesales Team Leader to COO
    • Bringing the difference
    • Work with great people and listen
    • Sometimes you just have to believe
    • Sometimes you have to take a risk
    • The unreasonableness of excellence
    • Conviction, conviction, conviction
    • Lived experiences mean more than you think
    • Tolerance goes both ways
    • The compromise of partnership
    • Finding your voice


    To find out more about Guy Bloom and his award winning work in Team Coaching, Leadership Development and Executive Coaching click below.

    The link to everything CLICK HERE
    UK:
    07827 953814
    Email: guybloom@livingbrave.com
    Web: www.livingbrave.com

    91 - إنتي كيف ابتستعملي ديتول؟

    91 - إنتي كيف ابتستعملي ديتول؟

    إذا حابين تدعمونا مادياً في طريقتين

    Patreon الأولى عبر

    حيث يمكنكم الاستفادة من فوائد مثل الاستماع إلى أكثر من 10 حلقات سرية

    https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration

    الطريقة الثانية هي عبر تبرع نقدي لمرة واحدة عبر الرابط

    https://alfan.link/hamburger.generation

    كل دولار يتم التبرع به سيسعدنا و يساعدنا على الحفاظ على استدامة بودكاست جيل الهمبرجر

    -

    COVID في كثير ناس اتأثروا من 

    و لكن التأثير لم يكن فقط جسدياً و لكن عقلياً كمان

    طبعاً في ناس اتأثروا أكثر من ناس، و اليوم القصة عن تأثير ضخم لصديق عزيز لنا

    انشاء الله تعجبكم القصة

    Episode 58 - Laura's story - Hyperemesis Gravidarum and Home Breech Birth during Covid

    Episode 58 - Laura's story - Hyperemesis Gravidarum and Home Breech Birth during Covid

    In this week's episode, I am chatting with Laura Berkeley who shares with us her journey through two very different pregnancy and birth experiences - where she suffered hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) and had a vaginal breech birth at home with her second baby during Covid. 

    Laura gives great tips and information about becoming a mother and what has worked well for her since the birth of her first child. Laura is a trained hypnobirthing teacher and doula.  

    Laura's website - https://thelemontreebirth.co.uk

    Follow Laura on Instagram @laura_thelemontreebirth

    If you would like to buy a copy of the book that accompanies this podcast - click here:-

    Labour of Love - The Ultimate Guide to Being a Birth Partner — https://bit.ly/Labouroflove

    Or purchase a copy via my website - www.birthability.co.uk

    Follow me on Instagram @theultimatebirthpartner @birthability

    Book a 1-2-1 session with Sallyann  -  https://linktr.ee/SallyannBeresford

    Please remember that the information shared with you in this episode is solely based on my own personal experiences as a doula and the private opinions of my guest, based on her own experiences as a mother.  Any recommendations made may not be suitable for all women so listeners must do their own research before making decisions.  

    If you would like to buy a copy of either of the books that accompany this podcast please go to your online bookseller or visit Amazon:-

    Labour of Love - The Ultimate Guide to Being a Birth Partner - click here:-https://bit.ly/Labouroflove

    The Art of Giving Birth - Five Key Physiological Principles - https://amzn.to/3EGh9df

    Pregnancy Journal for 'The Art of Giving Birth'
    - Black and White version https://amzn.to/3CvJXmO

    Pregnancy Journal for 'The Art of Giving Birth'
    - Colour version https://amzn.to/3GknbPF

    You can find all my classes and courses on my website - www.sallyannberesford.co.uk

    Follow me on Instagram @theultimatebirthpartner

    Book a 1-2-1 session with Sallyann - https://linktr.ee/SallyannBeresford

    Please remember that the information shared with you in this episode is solely based on my own personal experiences as a doula and the private opinions of my guests, based on their own experiences. Any recommendations made may not be suitable for all listeners, so you should always do your own research before making decisions.

    Guess what? I'm pregnant (and I have hyperemesis gravidarum)

    Guess what? I'm pregnant (and I have hyperemesis gravidarum)

    Thanks for tuning in to episode 29! It's been almost three months since my last episode, and today I'll explain why why I've been gone this long.

    Resources on hyperemesis gravidarum:

    Prayer mentioned on the show:

    Take, Lord, and receive all my liberty,
    my memory, my understanding, and all my will—
     all that I have and possess.
    You, Lord, have given all that to me.
    I now give it back to you, O Lord.
    All of it is yours.
    Dispose of it according to your will.
    Give me love of yourself along with grace,
    for that is enough for me.”

    Support the show?

    • The best way you can support the show is by sharing this link to someone you know or on your favorite social media app.
    • Another great way to show your support is by leaving a review on iTunes (and hopefully a ★★★★★ rating?), which will help others like you find and enjoy the show, as well.



    Special thanks to Mario Callejas for providing the music for the Kin show! Check out his music on Spotify.

    315: Recapping vBSDcon 2019

    315: Recapping vBSDcon 2019
    vBSDcon 2019 recap, Unix at 50, OpenBSD on fan-less Tuxedo InfinityBook, humungus - an hg server, how to configure a network dump in FreeBSD, and more. Headlines vBSDcon Recap Allan and Benedict attended vBSDcon 2019, which ended last week. It was held again at the Hyatt Regency Reston and the main conference was organized by Dan Langille of BSDCan fame.The two day conference was preceded by a one day FreeBSD hackathon, where FreeBSD developers had the chance to work on patches and PRs. In the evening, a reception was held to welcome attendees and give them a chance to chat and get to know each other over food and drinks. The first day of the conference was opened with a Keynote by Paul Vixie about DNS over HTTPS (DoH). He explained how we got to the current state and what challenges (technical and social) this entails. If you missed this talk and are dying to see it, it will also be presented at EuroBSDCon next week John Baldwin followed up by giving an overview of the work on “In-Kernel TLS Framing and Encryption for FreeBSD” abstract (https://www.vbsdcon.com/schedule/2019-09-06.html#talk:132615) and the recent commit we covered in episode 313. Meanwhile, Brian Callahan was giving a separate session in another room about “Learning to (Open)BSD through its porting system: an attendee-driven educational session” where people had the chance to learn about how to create ports for the BSDs. David Fullard’s talk about “Transitioning from FreeNAS to FreeBSD” was his first talk at a BSD conference and described how he built his own home NAS setup trying to replicate FreeNAS’ functionality on FreeBSD, and why he transitioned from using an appliance to using vanilla FreeBSD. Shawn Webb followed with his overview talk about the “State of the Hardened Union”. Benedict’s talk about “Replacing an Oracle Server with FreeBSD, OpenZFS, and PostgreSQL” was well received as people are interested in how we liberated ourselves from the clutches of Oracle without compromising functionality. Entertaining and educational at the same time, Michael W. Lucas talk about “Twenty Years in Jail: FreeBSD Jails, Then and Now” closed the first day. Lucas also had a table in the hallway with his various tech and non-tech books for sale. People formed small groups and went into town for dinner. Some returned later that night to some work in the hacker lounge or talk amongst fellow BSD enthusiasts. Colin Percival was the keynote speaker for the second day and had an in-depth look at “23 years of software side channel attacks”. Allan reprised his “ELI5: ZFS Caching” talk explaining how the ZFS adaptive replacement cache (ARC) work and how it can be tuned for various workloads. “By the numbers: ZFS Performance Results from Six Operating Systems and Their Derivatives” by Michael Dexter followed with his approach to benchmarking OpenZFS on various platforms. Conor Beh was also a new speaker to vBSDcon. His talk was about “FreeBSD at Work: Building Network and Storage Infrastructure with pfSense and FreeNAS”. Two OpenBSD talks closed the talk session: Kurt Mosiejczuk with “Care and Feeding of OpenBSD Porters” and Aaron Poffenberger with “Road Warrior Disaster Recovery: Secure, Synchronized, and Backed-up”. A dinner and reception was enjoyed by the attendees and gave more time to discuss the talks given and other things until late at night. We want to thank the vBSDcon organizers and especially Dan Langille for running such a great conference. We are grateful to Verisign as the main sponsor and The FreeBSD Foundation for sponsoring the tote bags. Thanks to all the speakers and attendees! humungus - an hg server (https://humungus.tedunangst.com/r/humungus) Features View changes, files, changesets, etc. Some syntax highlighting. Read only. Serves multiple repositories. Allows cloning via the obvious URL. Supports go get. Serves files for downloads. Online documentation via mandoc. Terminal based admin interface. News Roundup OpenBSD on fan-less Tuxedo InfinityBook 14″ v2. (https://hazardous.org/archive/blog/openbsd/2019/09/02/OpenBSD-on-Infinitybook14) The InfinityBook 14” v2 is a fanless 14” notebook. It is an excellent choice for running OpenBSD - but order it with the supported wireless card (see below.). I’ve set it up in a dual-boot configuration so that I can switch between Linux and OpenBSD - mainly to spot differences in the drivers. TUXEDO allows a variety of configurations through their webshop. The dual boot setup with grub2 and EFI boot will be covered in a separate blogpost. My tests were done with OpenBSD-current - which is as of writing flagged as 6.6-beta. See Article for breakdown of CPU, Wireless, Video, Webcam, Audio, ACPI, Battery, Touchpad, and MicroSD Card Reader Unix at 50: How the OS that powered smartphones started from failure (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/08/unix-at-50-it-starts-with-a-mainframe-a-gator-and-three-dedicated-researchers/) Maybe its pervasiveness has long obscured its origins. But Unix, the operating system that in one derivative or another powers nearly all smartphones sold worldwide, was born 50 years ago from the failure of an ambitious project that involved titans like Bell Labs, GE, and MIT. Largely the brainchild of a few programmers at Bell Labs, the unlikely story of Unix begins with a meeting on the top floor of an otherwise unremarkable annex at the sprawling Bell Labs complex in Murray Hill, New Jersey. It was a bright, cold Monday, the last day of March 1969, and the computer sciences department was hosting distinguished guests: Bill Baker, a Bell Labs vice president, and Ed David, the director of research. Baker was about to pull the plug on Multics (a condensed form of MULTiplexed Information and Computing Service), a software project that the computer sciences department had been working on for four years. Multics was two years overdue, way over budget, and functional only in the loosest possible understanding of the term. Trying to put the best spin possible on what was clearly an abject failure, Baker gave a speech in which he claimed that Bell Labs had accomplished everything it was trying to accomplish in Multics and that they no longer needed to work on the project. As Berk Tague, a staffer present at the meeting, later told Princeton University, “Like Vietnam, he declared victory and got out of Multics.” Within the department, this announcement was hardly unexpected. The programmers were acutely aware of the various issues with both the scope of the project and the computer they had been asked to build it for. Still, it was something to work on, and as long as Bell Labs was working on Multics, they would also have a $7 million mainframe computer to play around with in their spare time. Dennis Ritchie, one of the programmers working on Multics, later said they all felt some stake in the success of the project, even though they knew the odds of that success were exceedingly remote. Cancellation of Multics meant the end of the only project that the programmers in the Computer science department had to work on—and it also meant the loss of the only computer in the Computer science department. After the GE 645 mainframe was taken apart and hauled off, the computer science department’s resources were reduced to little more than office supplies and a few terminals. Some of Allan’s favourite excerpts: In the early '60s, Bill Ninke, a researcher in acoustics, had demonstrated a rudimentary graphical user interface with a DEC PDP-7 minicomputer. Acoustics still had that computer, but they weren’t using it and had stuck it somewhere out of the way up on the sixth floor. And so Thompson, an indefatigable explorer of the labs’ nooks and crannies, finally found that PDP-7 shortly after Davis and Baker cancelled Multics. With the rest of the team’s help, Thompson bundled up the various pieces of the PDP-7—a machine about the size of a refrigerator, not counting the terminal—moved it into a closet assigned to the acoustics department, and got it up and running. One way or another, they convinced acoustics to provide space for the computer and also to pay for the not infrequent repairs to it out of that department’s budget. McIlroy’s programmers suddenly had a computer, kind of. So during the summer of 1969, Thompson, Ritchie, and Canaday hashed out the basics of a file manager that would run on the PDP-7. This was no simple task. Batch computing—running programs one after the other—rarely required that a computer be able to permanently store information, and many mainframes did not have any permanent storage device (whether a tape or a hard disk) attached to them. But the time-sharing environment that these programmers had fallen in love with required attached storage. And with multiple users connected to the same computer at the same time, the file manager had to be written well enough to keep one user’s files from being written over another user’s. When a file was read, the output from that file had to be sent to the user that was opening it. It was a challenge that McIlroy’s team was willing to accept. They had seen the future of computing and wanted to explore it. They knew that Multics was a dead-end, but they had discovered the possibilities opened up by shared development, shared access, and real-time computing. Twenty years later, Ritchie characterized it for Princeton as such: “What we wanted to preserve was not just a good environment in which to do programming, but a system around which a fellowship could form.” Eventually when they had the file management system more or less fleshed out conceptually, it came time to actually write the code. The trio—all of whom had terrible handwriting—decided to use the Labs’ dictating service. One of them called up a lab extension and dictated the entire code base into a tape recorder. And thus, some unidentified clerical worker or workers soon had the unenviable task of trying to convert that into a typewritten document. Of course, it was done imperfectly. Among various errors, “inode” came back as “eye node,” but the output was still viewed as a decided improvement over their assorted scribbles. In August 1969, Thompson’s wife and son went on a three-week vacation to see her family out in Berkeley, and Thompson decided to spend that time writing an assembler, a file editor, and a kernel to manage the PDP-7 processor. This would turn the group’s file manager into a full-fledged operating system. He generously allocated himself one week for each task. Thompson finished his tasks more or less on schedule. And by September, the computer science department at Bell Labs had an operating system running on a PDP-7—and it wasn’t Multics. By the summer of 1970, the team had attached a tape drive to the PDP-7, and their blossoming OS also had a growing selection of tools for programmers (several of which persist down to this day). But despite the successes, Thompson, Canaday, and Ritchie were still being rebuffed by labs management in their efforts to get a brand-new computer. It wasn’t until late 1971 that the computer science department got a truly modern computer. The Unix team had developed several tools designed to automatically format text files for printing over the past year or so. They had done so to simplify the production of documentation for their pet project, but their tools had escaped and were being used by several researchers elsewhere on the top floor. At the same time, the legal department was prepared to spend a fortune on a mainframe program called “AstroText.” Catching wind of this, the Unix crew realized that they could, with only a little effort, upgrade the tools they had written for their own use into something that the legal department could use to prepare patent applications. The computer science department pitched lab management on the purchase of a DEC PDP-11 for document production purposes, and Max Mathews offered to pay for the machine out of the acoustics department budget. Finally, management gave in and purchased a computer for the Unix team to play with. Eventually, word leaked out about this operating system, and businesses and institutions with PDP-11s began contacting Bell Labs about their new operating system. The Labs made it available for free—requesting only the cost of postage and media from anyone who wanted a copy. The rest has quite literally made tech history. See the link for the rest of the article How to configure a network dump in FreeBSD? (https://www.oshogbo.vexillium.org/blog/68/) A network dump might be very useful for collecting kernel crash dumps from embedded machines and machines with a larger amount of RAM then available swap partition size. Besides net dumps we can also try to compress the core dump. However, often this may still not be enough swap to keep whole core dump. In such situation using network dump is a convenient and reliable way for collecting kernel dump. So, first, let’s talk a little bit about history. The first implementation of the network dumps was implemented around 2000 for the FreeBSD 4.x as a kernel module. The code was implemented in 2010 with the intention of being part of FreeBSD 9.0. However, the code never landed in FreeBSD. Finally, in 2018 with the commit r333283 by Mark Johnston the netdump client code landed in the FreeBSD. Subsequently, many other commitments were then implemented to add support for the different drivers (for example r333289). The first official release of FreeBSD, which support netdump is FreeBSD 12.0. Now, let’s get back to the main topic. How to configure the network dump? Two machines are needed. One machine is to collect core dump, let’s call it server. We will use the second one to send us the core dump - the client. See the link for the rest of the article Beastie Bits Sudo Mastery 2nd edition is not out (https://mwl.io/archives/4530) Empirical Notes on the Interaction Between Continuous Kernel Fuzzing and Development (http://users.utu.fi/kakrind/publications/19/vulnfuzz_camera.pdf) soso (https://github.com/ozkl/soso) GregKH - OpenBSD was right (https://youtu.be/gUqcMs0svNU?t=254) Game of Trees (https://gameoftrees.org/faq.html) Feedback/Questions BostJan - Another Question (http://dpaste.com/1ZPCCQY#wrap) Tom - PF (http://dpaste.com/3ZSCB8N#wrap) JohnnyK - Changing VT without keys (http://dpaste.com/3QZQ7Q5#wrap) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv)

    Hidden Toxins in Our Body

    Hidden Toxins in Our Body
    Our most basic external bodily cues may tell us we are healthy but there may be more to staying healthy than just eating your recommended serving of vegetables. Staying healthy in our society is about knowing what unwanted entities could potentially be plaguing your body. In many fields like dentistry, where we expect certain measures to be taken in the name of our safety, may be adding toxins to your body. In this important episode, we are joined by activist and dental expert Marisa Russo who will talk about hidden toxins that are more common than expected. We'll give you some insights on taking the steps toward a toxic free body.

    LyonJUG - 20/09/2011

    LyonJUG - 20/09/2011
    Présenté par Sébastien Douche (http://www.lyonjug.org/speakers#TOC-S-bastien-Douche) le 20/09/2011. Utilisateur de SVN pendant de nombreuses années, Sébastien avait la sensation croissante de se battre avec son outil de travail. Pire, il s'adaptait très mal à ses exigences collaboratives. De guerre las, il a choisi un outil de gestion de source décentralisé (Hg puis Git) début 2008. La différence était flagrante, il se sentait comme libéré d'un poids qui le ralentissait, et la production de l'équipe s'est fortement améliorée (quantitativement et qualitativement). Cette soirée vous donnera la compréhension nécessaire pour aborder sereinement l'utilisation de Git (et aux DVCS en général). Une première partie sera consacrée à la théorie, en passant en revue tous les concepts nécessaires avec l'aide de nombreux schémas didactiques. Nous mettrons en pratique nos nouvelles connaissances dans la seconde partie, en abordant les commandes qui font la «différence», les workflows, l'utilisation de GitHub, le tout saupoudré de conseils pour bien démarrer. Nous aborderons également mais succinctement la philosophie Devops avec un retour d'expérience dans mon entreprise.