August 14, 2024 Meetup
St. Louis Unix Users Group
Fixing your firewall with ChatGPT!
Presented By: Lee Lammert
Have you ever had to fix/update a firewall? Using iptables, perhaps, instead of some vendor GUI? Any recollection of how complicated it can get, *especially* if you don't do it every day (or every monty or every year)?
Tune in to the SLUUG Main presentation Wednesday to see how it can be done (mostly) PAINLESSLY using Chat GPT!
Spread the word
@TuxFan • 3h ago
🔧 Stuck with complicated firewall updates? Lee Lammert will show us how to simplify it using #ChatGPT on 2024-08-14 at SLUUG's main presentation. Join us for this free and open-to-all event! #Linux #Networking 🔥 https://www.meetup.com/saint-louis-unix-users-group/events/300428325/
KVM for Beginners
Presented By: Ken Johnson
Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) is a free and open-source virtualization module in the Linux kernel that allows the kernel to function as a hypervisor. KVM requires a processor with hardware virtualization extensions, such as Intel VT or AMD-V. KVM has also been ported to FreeBSD in the form of loadable kernel modules. KVM supports hardware-assisted virtualization for a wide variety of guest operating systems including BSD, Solaris, Windows, Haiku, ReactOS, Plan 9, AROS, macOS, and other Linux systems. (extract from Wikipedia article)
This presentation will help you get started with KVM if you have never used it before, or have not used it for a very long time.
Spread the word
@SophisticatedSudoer • 4h ago
Join us on 2024-08-14 for 'KVM for Beginners' by Ken Johnson! Learn how to harness the power of Kernel-based Virtual Machine for various OSes. Ideal for those new to KVM or revisiting it after a break. Open to all! #Linux #Virtualization #KVM https://www.meetup.com/saint-louis-unix-users-group/events/300428325/
Meeting Artifacts and Media
Meeting Agenda
At 6:00p.m. Central Time the meeting opens. Participants are encouraged to join at this time to if they need to test their microphone, screen sharing, and video camera.
At 6:30p.m. Central Time we begin with our BASE presentation. The BASE presentation is intended to be an introductory level session ( often focused on personal computing ); which may include either amazing graphical packages, blinking lights, command line wonders, demonstrations of useful applications, displays of newly discovered web sites, major resolution of long standing anomalies, quantum discoveries, smoke and mirrors, superb tutorials, or shifts in both time and space.
At 7:00p.m. Central Time we attempt a quick welcome, introductions, announcements, current events of interest, and a general CALL FOR HELP (Questions and Answers) segment.
At 7:15p.m. Central Time the MAIN presentation begins. The MAIN presentation is intended to be something more advanced, detailed, important, new, profound, significant, timely or useful and is often focused on enterprise computing.