Connection Information will be provided in this link on the day of the meeting.

The meeting will open at 6:00p.m. Central Time.

The presentation(s) will begin at 6:30p.m. Central Time.

June 12, 2024 Meetup

St. Louis Unix Users Group

Social Media for Nerds

Presented By: Scott Granneman

What 'social media' might a nerd or techie want to use? Mastodon? Slack? Discord? TechTV? Twitch? What are the differences between these and other social media? Why use one rather than another?

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@BashBabe • 3h ago

Save the date! Scott Granneman will unpack the differences between Mastodon, Slack, Discord, and others in 'Social Media for Nerds' on 2024-06-12. Perfect for all tech enthusiasts! #SLUUG #TechSavvy #SocialMedia https://www.meetup.com/saint-louis-unix-users-group/events/301551674/

An adventure in starting network 'sniffing'

Presented By: Grant TaylorLee Lammert

Are you just starting to 'sniff' to see what is going on at that network interface? Last month we showed an overview of how to start and 'get the feel.' This month, lets look at some specifics. (This is a tutorial, so if it seems a bit esoteric, we expect folks to ask questions. We hope for a good discussion.)

Our mission tonite is to have Wireshark SSH to a system and run tcpdump remotely and send the packet data back to Wireshark on the client.

To do this, the client needs to be able to log into the remote system and gain sufficient privileges to run tcpdump without password prompts.

Spread the word

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@LinuxLad • 4h ago

💻 Ready to master network 'sniffing'? Join Lee Lammert and Grant Taylor on 2024-06-12 for a hands-on tutorial using Wireshark and tcpdump. Bring your questions! #OpenSource #networking #SLUUG https://www.meetup.com/saint-louis-unix-users-group/events/301551674/

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.