We found 3 episodes of Ask Noah Show with the tag “contributor covenant”.
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Episode 96: SQLite with Richard Hipp
November 3rd, 2018 | 59 mins 55 secs
altispeed, ask questions, call in show, coc, contributor covenant, getting started, linux, linux questions, noah chelliah, noah j. chelliah, podcast, privacy, questions, richard hipp, security, sqlite, talk radio, voxtelesys
If you have a device with an operating system chances are it uses SQLite. Richard Hipp is our guest this hour and he joins us to talk about their controversial CoC. As an alternative to the Contributor Covenant the Rule of St. Benedict was chosen for it’s long and proven track record. Red Hat has officially dropped support for the KDE Desktop and we give you our take on that decision but as always your phone calls go to the front of the line!
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Episode 86: Linus Takes a Break
September 18th, 2018 | 59 mins 57 secs
altispeed, ask questions, call in show, code of conduct, contributor covenant, getting started, linus torvalds, linux, linux questions, lkml, noah chelliah, noah j. chelliah, paul m. jones open source, podcast, privacy, questions, security, talk radio, voxtelesys
Linus Torvalds has decided he needs a break so he can understand people and their emotions better. The kernel has finally adopted a code of conduct based on the contributor covenant. No one knows more about codes of conduct than Paul M. Jones. Paul joins us in the second half of the program to help us explore the situation and give us some insight into what we can expect for the future of Linux.
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Episode 12: The Golden Rule
June 12th, 2017 | 1 hr 8 secs
altispeed, code of conduct, contributor covenant, getting started, linux, noah chelliah, opalgate, paul jones, paul m jones, podcast, production, questions, sjw, social juctice, talk radio
This week we're live from Cincinnati Public Radio to bring a very controversial episode of the Ask Noah Show. We sit down with Paul M. Jones & he tells us why some codes of conduct are a bad idea. We take your calls, plus we we look to see if Linux security is flawed.