 Hey everybody, I'm Jen and this is the open source.com weekly top five video We published this article or this roundup as an article and as a video Every Friday afternoon, so I would encourage you to subscribe to our YouTube channel So that you can get an alert that we have uploaded the new video It's also a great way for you to check in with the site and see what's been most popular And then choose from that list the small short list a couple of things that you might be Most interested in reading. I know that your time is probably Precious as it all as it is with all of us. So this might be a great way for you to check in with us weekly Alright, I wanted to also mention that tomorrow is Arduino day on it's every every March and tomorrow It's on March 28th. So a lot of people around the world will be Tinkering with their arduinos and doing some fun maker and tinkering projects So today we published an article that is a roundup of six fun projects that Our staffer Alex Sanchez came up with and so hopefully you'll find some fun in those and maybe even try one out tomorrow All right, so let's hop into our top five this week at number five We have listened to streaming music with pie music box after his project to control his Christmas tree lights with a raspberry pie Anderson Silva wondered what he would do next finally. He landed on tinkering with pie music box It's a spin of Raspbian and Mobidy that allows users to play streaming music services like Spotify iTunes SoundCloud as well as your local sound files This is a step-by-step guide At number four how one professor saved students millions with his shared textbooks Nicole Ingaard interviews David Littman of Pierce College where he is a professor He has saved students millions of dollars with his shared textbooks We all know how expensive they can be and he's also built something called iMath AS It is a free and open source math assessment and course platform. So read more from that interview with them At number three where is the best place online to learn a programming language? So this is another poll another great poll that we ran this week. That's doing well with readers. It is based on our last poll That asked which programming language was the is the best to learn first So this poll follows up on that by asking from what service or organization online Should you then learn that programming language? So Code Academy is out front with Coursera and some written-in responses, which we love close behind At number two intro to grace and open source educational programming language Joshua Holm brings us an article introducing grace and Explaining just how it is designed to meet the needs of teaching and learning programming in an educational setting Holm includes some helpful code as well as a couple of videos to round out his coverage One of those videos includes a talk at a Linux conference by Michael Homer Finally at number one this week how to do fast repeatable Linux installations David Boff has been writing a series for us on what he calls the Linux philosophy There are nine tenets to this philosophy of which you can read more about in his first and second articles This one however is about automating all the things David walks us through how he installs Linux and scripts repetitive tasks Including a link to his fairly simple bash script that he uses to do configurations and installation of desired RPM packages All right, everybody. That's our roundup this week. I hope you enjoyed it and I hope to see you next time. Thanks