Open Source with Fexingo: Linux, GitHub, and Community-Driven Software Conversations

PODCAST · business

Open Source with Fexingo: Linux, GitHub, and Community-Driven Software Conversations

Lucas and Luna sit down in a community-oriented open-source workspace to talk about the people and projects powering Linux, GitHub, and the broader software commons. Each episode pivots off a specific repository, a recent pull request, or a governance debate inside a well-known foundation—Kubernetes, GNOME, Apache, or a smaller but influential library. They walk through the actual numbers: commit velocity, maintainer burnout rates, funding flows from corporate sponsors like Red Hat or Google, and the economics behind permissive versus copyleft licenses. Luna often challenges Lucas on the tension between volunteer idealism and the reality of venture-backed open-core companies, while Lucas brings historical context from the GNU Manifesto to today's AI model releases. The listener they serve is a developer, a product manager, or a tech executive who already uses open source daily and wants to understand the hidden incentives and power structures shaping the tools they depend on. Whether d

No episodes available yet.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Lucas and Luna sit down in a community-oriented open-source workspace to talk about the people and projects powering Linux, GitHub, and the broader software commons. Each episode pivots off a specific repository, a recent pull request, or a governance debate inside a well-known foundation—Kubernetes, GNOME, Apache, or a smaller but influential library. They walk through the actual numbers: commit velocity, maintainer burnout rates, funding flows from corporate sponsors like Red Hat or Google, and the economics behind permissive versus copyleft licenses. Luna often challenges Lucas on the tension between volunteer idealism and the reality of venture-backed open-core companies, while Lucas brings historical context from the GNU Manifesto to today's AI model releases. The listener they serve is a developer, a product manager, or a tech executive who already uses open source daily and wants to understand the hidden incentives and power structures shaping the tools they depend on. Whether d

HOSTED BY

Fexingo

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!