1001 lines
463 KiB
MySQL
1001 lines
463 KiB
MySQL
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(2391,2547,'2018-05-08 12:27:50','ClaudioM','MSYS2 is What Cygwin Should Be','First off, thanks for the mention, good sir! :-)\r\n\r\nSecondly, thank you for this episode. As much as I use Cygwin at work, I despise...DESPISE...having to use the Cygwin Installer to install/update/remove packages. MSYS2 is what I\'ve always wanted from Cygwin: an integrated, command line package manager for updating packages inside of the POSIX-compatible environment, just as you would do on any Unix-like system.\r\n\r\nI\'ll have to start backing up my configuration files in order to make the big switch on my Windows PCs at work.','2018-05-08 13:01:20'),
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(2392,2547,'2018-05-08 14:26:09','Gavtres','Git Bash','Linux newbie here. I am working on a new project and last week, as a requisite, needed to install Git for Windows. I was wondering about the voodoo magic behind Git Bash, so thank you for the explanation.\r\n\r\nBy the way, cool alternate \"beatbox\" version of the HPR outro. :-)','2018-05-08 14:28:32'),
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(2393,1762,'2018-05-12 21:26:03','dodddummy','Tickles me in places I\'m not sure I\'m comfortable with','This tickled all of my private places. Ok. just the references to free culture.\r\n\r\nLoved the reader\'s voice. Liked the story.\r\n\r\nI agree with pokey about the timing of things regarding can food, MREs et al. But it didn\'t keep me out of the story. I thought it was strange that people had forgotten so much in so few years. But I\'ve some real life situations where people weren\'t taught anything for a generation and it is a bit like this.\r\n\r\nI liked the \'glitches\' these guys mentioned.\r\n\r\nI can confirm that the issue with the ogg files is the album art. I didn\'t listen to this until after I listened to the audio book. I had the same issue. Downloaded fine but wouldn\'t play in rockbox. A little searching lead me to a suggestion that if an ogg file plays ok in vlc other other players but not rockbox, the album art is a likely culprit.\r\n\r\nRemoved them with Audio Tag Tool and all is well. If memory serves, the rockbox folks says it\'s because it only has 1mb for meta data.','2018-05-12 22:43:38'),
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(2394,2551,'2018-05-14 21:01:33','mcnalu','Oscillowant','I too have a secret desire for an oscillascope. I\'m building a wee one from a kit just now but that\'s mostly for fun. I\'ll need one that can handle 25MHz clock signals for troubleshooting my poorly Amiga 3000, hence my interest in this show.\r\n\r\nAlso, the HPR robot calls you nibble too! :D','2018-05-14 21:09:30'),
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(2395,2551,'2018-05-14 21:37:18','NYbill','A chimp by another name...','Yea, the Espeak kind of butchers my nick. I bet \'En Why Bill\' would sound about right. Hey Espeak, I live in New York! ;)\r\n\r\nGood luck your scope build. 25mhz will be right in the wheel house of the kit type scopes.','2018-05-14 21:42:36'),
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(2396,2550,'2018-05-22 18:56:16','redrider06','Howto get started playing RPGs','I started participating in RPGs several months ago but did none of the things mentioned in this presentation prior to actually playing the game.\r\n\r\nMy GM took the small gathering of curious gamesters through a couple of relatively short scenarios/stories which kept the interest up and the mechanics of everything mentioned in this podcast at a double arm’s length away. We didn’t know it then but it kept us focused on the game rather than too many details of characters. Sure, we still built characters but it was a very abbreviated process. Not until some months and many game sessions later did I actually do my own research and discovered parts of what this podcast brings together very succinctly. And now that I know a bit more about the whole process, this podcast is all the more interesting.\r\n\r\nLostnbronx and Klaatu have done a splendid job of laying out a very understandable and approachable process for those curious about taking part in an RPG. (The sound production was stellar too.) Well done, gentlemen.','2018-05-22 19:06:00'),
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(2397,2560,'2018-05-25 04:58:30','clacke','The date','How very appropriate that this would be released precisely for May 25th. :-)','2018-05-25 07:20:53'),
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(2398,2556,'2018-05-25 16:00:04','Ken Fallon','Profound','From https://hackerpublicradio.org/about.php\r\n\r\n\"Anyone who has shown a long term dedication to the project and is trusted by the community, can become an admin.\"','2022-02-14 13:18:05'),
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(2399,2560,'2018-05-25 19:59:33','NYbill','Nice TLDR.','Nice summery of the GDPR, Ken. I was wondering what this was all about. And I have noticed everyone and their brother sending out policy updates these days. But, as I doubt the GDPR pertains to my little servers I wasn\'t really paying much attention. \r\n\r\nYou did the deep dive for me. ;) \r\n\r\nBTW, you might want to do Noise Reduction, then Truncate Silence. This one sounded a bit like a guy on radio keying up the mic at random times while talking. :P','2018-05-25 20:05:06'),
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(2400,2549,'2018-05-30 19:55:35','Klaatu','neat','Nice to hear Slackware 32-bit still coming in useful. I don\'t mind that so many Linux distros are discarding 32-bit as long as somebody keeps it around, because while 32-bit hardware is fading, there\'s still a LOT of it out there.','2018-05-30 19:58:36'),
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(2401,2158,'2018-06-05 11:14:19','MathMann','Art Club','Great show and it sounds like a great way to delve into one of the mainstays of human life - sharing it and the world around us with those around us. Thanks Brian for giving all a way to connect and learn.','2018-06-05 11:40:23'),
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(2402,1992,'2018-06-07 11:23:11','folky','Changed links to my gits','I just migrated from github to gitlab. So do a s/hub/lab/g in above links.\r\nFor those who didn\'t heard about it, on the following link you find the cause for the migration: https://blog.github.com/2018-06-04-github-microsoft/','2018-06-07 11:31:21'),
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(2403,2568,'2018-06-11 15:00:12','norrist','Receint pocdast on US Social Security','If you are interested, one of my _other_ favorite podcasts just did an episode on Social Security.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.npr.org/sections/money/2018/06/06/617662100/social-insecurity','2018-06-11 15:03:36'),
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(2404,2558,'2018-06-14 15:31:10','Michael','Great idea!','Thanks for starting that series!\r\nWhile the first examples were quite obvious to me, I can see how they can be helpful on a global scope, given the diverse international HPR community.\r\nFort the last bit, I have to admit that those were actually two new words I learnt (make that three with \"learnt\" :-)).\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2018-06-14 15:36:55'),
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(2405,2558,'2018-06-14 17:25:59','Dave Morriss','Thanks Michael','Glad you liked the episode.\r\nI\'m amazed by the number of times I see the then/than and there/their/they\'re errors in forums, YouTube comments and similar. I don\'t know if it\'s an autocorrect problem or what it is, but it\'s very common.\r\nI\'m actively collecting similar problems, so I hope I\'ll have enough to make a few more episodes!','2018-06-14 18:50:26'),
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(2406,2558,'2018-06-15 12:08:05','Hipstre','Battling With English','Interesting! I\'d like to hear a little bit about the origins of the mixups when it is historically interesting... Like, perhaps, one word comes from French and the other from German. But not necessary, viewing Communication as the problem and English as a flawed tool to solve it is a good route to take. Looking forward to the next one.','2018-06-15 12:10:54'),
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(2407,2566,'2018-06-15 14:24:50','clacke','The group of the tab is in the windowing (of it)','I\'ve never looked into tab grouping, because what I do, if my tabs start becoming unwieldy, is that I drag one of them out of the window, and it becomes a new window. I may drag other tabs into that new window if they belong together.\r\n\r\nYou people who use tab grouping, do you do this as well, giving you two-dimensional tab grouping, or does grouping replace multiple windows?','2018-06-15 14:36:41'),
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(2408,2562,'2018-06-15 14:29:03','clacke','Pinebook','As noted on May Community News[0], the laptop I\'m still queueing for is the PineBook[1].\r\n\r\n[0] https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2566\r\n[1] https://www.pine64.org/?page_id=3707','2022-02-14 13:25:06'),
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(2409,2557,'2018-06-15 14:41:21','clacke','Killer feature','I forgot to mention the killer feature, which is why we use Styx, apart from our great love for Nix: The ability to easily include content from remote sources.\r\n\r\nAs Styx uses Nix for getting its inputs, it\'s just as easy to build a page off a file in your local repository as getting a file from a remote repository, http URL, a whole bunch of files, or anything you can compute or get from a network, really.\r\n\r\nIn fact, even the default templates in Styx are fetched this way: If you never use them, they never touch your computer, but if you include the standard templates in your site definition, Styx knows to go out and fetch them and put them in the right places.\r\n\r\nWe use this to get documentation and changelog from our code repository into our web site.','2018-06-15 15:05:01'),
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(2410,2552,'2018-06-15 14:51:54','clacke','Clarification','It seems this is the month of clarifications, judging from the feedback from Ken and Dave on the Community News. :-)\r\n\r\nI\'m adding a deeper Stow show to my future shows tag.\r\n\r\nBut for now, here\'s what Dave was asking for:\r\n\r\nStow doesn\'t use any configuration, it\'s all simple, hard-coded behavior. When it stows things it puts things in the parent directory of the stow directory:\r\n\r\nIf your are in /home/clacke/stow and you do stow foo, any stuff in e.g. /home/clacke/stow/foo/lib gets symlinks in /home/clacke/lib .','2018-06-15 15:05:01'),
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(2411,2542,'2018-06-15 15:00:51','clacke','What is SparkleShare?','Apparently I didn\'t explain what SparkleShare is!\r\n\r\nIt\'s \"DropBox for git\". You tell it where your remote git repo is, and it keeps an eye on it and keeps a local directory in sync.\r\n\r\nWhenever anything happens in the remote repo, it pulls that change and makes your local sirectory the same.\r\n\r\nWhenever you add, remove or edit a file in your local directory, it creates a commit for your change and pushes it to the remote repo.\r\n\r\nAny conflicts that occur are resolved by creating a file named something like \"myfile conflicted on 2018-06-15T16:57:45.txt\", so you never have to understand anything about git to use SparkleShare. Just play with your files in your directory.\r\n\r\nThat\'s why it\'s so good for dads.','2018-06-15 15:05:01'),
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(2412,2558,'2018-06-15 15:20:26','Dave Morriss','Thanks Hipstre','That\'s a great suggestion. I spent some time looking at the etymology of the words I was talking about, as you can tell from the links, but I didn\'t consider talking about the subject. I\'ll mention such things in the future if it seems relevant.\r\n\r\nThanks for the feedback.','2018-06-15 15:23:08'),
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(2413,2566,'2018-06-15 15:53:46','Dave Morriss','I don\'t use multiple windows','In my case I use tab groups to keep useful and related web sites together to make \"context switching\" simpler. For example, in Pale Moon I have a group per HPR series or project, and when I\'m in the mood to prepare a new HPR show I run it on my right-hand monitor with Gvim on the left.\r\n\r\nI usually have Vivaldi, Chromium and IceWeasel running on different XFCE desktops as well, and all of these have pinned tabs so I can easily visit various HPR pages, the most used pages on my local MediaWiki instance, GitLab, GitHub, archive.org, Telegram groups, and so on.\r\n\r\nIt\'s probably (barely) organised chaos, but I like it ;-)','2018-06-15 15:55:08'),
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(2414,2576,'2018-06-19 08:14:37','Ken Fallon','Home country of choice','Love that concept.','2018-06-19 11:15:54'),
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(2415,2576,'2018-06-20 05:19:18','Clinton Roy','A english/german recommendation','I quite like the omega tau science & engineering podcast\r\npodcast, it comes in both english and german forms, I don\'t think they translate the content, it\'s just different stories for the different language podcasts.','2018-06-20 06:58:12'),
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(2416,2576,'2018-06-20 08:11:10','folky','Here is the link','Thank you, Clinton Roy!\r\nThat one I didn\'t know. I found their page https://omegataupodcast.net/ and shall give the dual-language feed a go on my serverlist: https://omegataupodcast.net/category/podcast/feed','2022-02-14 13:25:06'),
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(2417,2579,'2018-06-25 23:43:05','JWP','Great Little update','Tony always so nice to here from you again.\r\nSadly I am driving any Mate right now. Only two 16.04 boxes maybe after 16.04.1 thanks so much for the update','2018-06-26 07:19:01'),
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(2418,2574,'2018-06-25 23:48:08','JWP','This Show about Cash','Hi klaatu always interesting to see what you will bring up.\r\nI to for a long time when cash only. I do keep a card in the glove box or bring it traveling but I find I spend less if I just use cash.\r\n\r\nAlso if you can -- I really enjoy many of your topics. -- Might you get a better headset sometimes its hard for me to hear exactly what you say. (Audio quality between Jupiter broadcasting and Dave Morris quality would be greatly valued.)','2018-06-26 07:19:01'),
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(2419,2582,'2018-06-27 08:33:43','Ken Fallon','Would love HPR feedback','Great show - only one point.\r\n\r\nWe do not \"approve\" shows, we process them. See\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php#not_moderated\r\n\r\nYour show will not be moderated.\r\n\r\nWe do not vet, edit, moderate or in any way censor any of the shows on the network, we trust you to do that. Aside from checking snippets for audio quality/spam checking, we have a policy that we don\'t listen to the shows before they are aired. This is a long standing tradition arising from the fact that HPR is a community of peers who believe that any host has as much right to submit shows as any other.\r\n\r\nhpr2210 :: On Freedom of Speech and Censorship describes the agreed approach to this topic.','2022-02-14 13:25:07'),
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(2420,2585,'2018-06-29 20:04:21','NYbill','There is one more...','...I found this out by accident in my youth. You can also point the remote at an electric guitar pickup while its plugged into an amp. \r\n\r\ndit dit dit dit dit dit dit! \r\n\r\nAdd distortion or reverb to your liking. :P','2018-06-29 20:40:09'),
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(2421,2579,'2018-07-01 10:58:16','Tony Hughes','Great little update','Thanks JWP, I\'m glad at least one listener found it useful, having been using it for a good couple of months now I can say I am very impressed and have even found a work around for the usb utilities I use in mint. I have installed Mint 19 beta into virtual box and it seems very good and once the stable release is out it will still be my go to distro for installing for family and friends who are not Linux gurus. Ubuntu Mate will probably remain on my main box until the next LTS cycle as I try and keep that as stable as possible and change OS on it as infrequently as I can get away with.','2018-07-01 11:13:41'),
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(2422,2583,'2018-07-01 14:00:46','RandyNose AKA TheNose100','The Juiced Penguin','John, how weird that I pick a random podcast to out of the lineup to listen to and find this one on feedly. I didn\'t even see the Juiced Penguin in the title this morning when I started listening. Heck, it\'s not even something that I think about these days. \r\n\r\nThe Juiced Penguin was an idea that I had, and knew that I couldn\'t pull it off alone. - The Late Great Lord \"D\" assisted me with the original effort. It took a lot of time to find the music, and Klaatu assisted with offering up some content for it also. I found that it was really time consuming, and Terry F took over for a period of time until it fizzled out. \r\n\r\nThe main idea that I had was to get more OGG content out there, to help expand the awareness of the OGG format, due to restrictions of the MP3 format, and that many MP3 Players didn\'t support it. - Today, most people are listening to content on computers or Android devices, most are able to listen to the ogg format, if they wish. \r\n\r\nIf my ol\' memory serves right, even Mark Shuttleworth has stopped worrying about the MP3 format being a real problem, even tho\' it\'s still a closed file format. Granted it\'s not open, but the threat of being sued doesn\'t seem likely after nothing happening after all of this time. \r\n\r\n- FWIW, when I AM online I\'m easily found over on G+ aka randynose.com Also over on Mastodon.Rocks @randynose. \r\n\r\nThanks for reminding me of some good times years ago... \r\n\r\nAll hail the Juiced Penguin. :)','2018-07-01 14:14:02'),
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(2423,2605,'2018-07-01 17:08:59','Ken Fallon','I *see* what you did there :)','see, vision, eyes - get it ?','2018-07-01 17:40:58'),
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(2424,2588,'2018-07-04 19:18:20','Klaatu','painting miniatures','I see amazing painted minis at my local hobby shop, and it always makes me want to get into creating dioramas and battlefields for games, but I don\'t feel like I have the time,money,or space for it. Thanks for letting me live vicariously through your hobby in this episode.','2018-07-04 19:58:52'),
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(2425,2519,'2018-07-04 19:27:14','Klaatu','great walkthrough','Thanks for this episode. I\'d heard of Edge of the Empire but have never played. I really like your character build process, and this was a nice overview of how characters work in this system. Thanks1','2018-07-04 19:58:52'),
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(2426,2558,'2018-07-06 13:24:24','The Snitch','The Jig is up Dave !','https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/noun','2018-07-06 13:35:40'),
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(2427,2558,'2018-07-06 15:19:55','Dave Morriss','Re: The Jig is up','Haha!\r\n\r\nIsn\'t that like that line from that Star-Trek-Wars film: \"Leverage the Force Luke!\"?\r\n\r\nNo, I\'m wrong, that\'s a verbification I think...\r\nhttps://this.isfluent.com/blog/2010/are-you-stupid-enough-to-use-leverage-as-a-verb','2018-07-06 15:22:31'),
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(2428,2590,'2018-07-08 23:17:53','Klaatu','Switches on mains','I\'d never seen an on/off switch on an electirical outlet until New Zealand. Here, every electrical outlet has a dedicated power switch so that you can plug in a device and then power it on. It\'s really useful.\r\n\r\nIn the USA, I think the only way to simulate this is to use a power strip (sometimes a surge protector, other times just a splitter, which often have switches on them.','2018-07-09 08:16:56'),
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(2429,2589,'2018-07-08 23:21:36','Klaatu','Thanks for furthering this discussion','You make some really great points. Thanks for taking this discussion farther. I\'d be interested in hearing about more people\'s experiences with saving money, too, because I don\'t think there is just one right answer (or, arguably, the obligation or ability to save at all, if somebody wants to argue those points). The morality is interesting to me, too. It seems like the only way to \"grow\" money requires either contributing to something one doesn\'t actually want to support, or else taking advantage of others. \r\n\r\nBasically, this is a huge topic and it\'s one that is getting more interesting the more I hear other people talk about it.','2018-07-09 08:16:56'),
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(2430,2588,'2018-07-09 11:57:06','dodddummy','Wonder no more','I\'ve seen lots of miniatures in the past and wondered what goes on in the mind of those who point them. Now I know. Thanks for the insight.','2018-07-09 12:24:02'),
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(2431,2589,'2018-07-10 00:50:17','jonkulp','The Suburban Option','Thanks for the comment, Klaatu. I\'d like to hear more discussion about this, too, especially any arguments about whether saving money is really necessary or not. I have at least one colleague at work who rides his bike 4.5 miles each way (and has for the last 20 some years), and he says that he does not save for retirement because his retirement plan is to get hit by a Suburban on the road. I think he\'s only half kidding.','2018-07-10 07:49:16'),
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(2432,2594,'2018-07-17 10:31:58','klaatu','nice first ep!','Great episode. I loved your use cases, and the walk-through of using the tool. Also, I tried nmtui out for myself and it is actually quite useful. Network configuration is such a bother, so it\'s nice to have an \"easy\" button with tools like these that still don\'t depend on a Xorg/Wayland/whatever.','2018-07-17 11:36:25'),
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(2433,2596,'2018-07-17 10:40:21','klaatu','great series','This is such a great series. I can honestly say that, having spoken fairly proper English for my entire life, I hate the English language. Of all the languages poised to serve as a global language, there could not be one more undeserving than an amalgamation of Germanic forced through a filter of Latin. It\'s inconsistent, confusing, over-complex, and yet also insufficient (see the FSF\'s struggle with the lack of an adjective form of \"free\" for an example).\r\n\r\nI really wish a sensible, constructed language would be adopted in English\'s place.\r\n\r\nAnyway, nice series, although your efforts are surely in vain, because English will never make sense.','2018-07-17 11:36:25'),
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(2434,2599,'2018-07-19 01:51:40','cmhobbs','great plan!','Loved this episode, Ken! Wish I would\'ve thought about this before purchasing TaoTronics TT-BA07. I like my little device but I prefer the DIY way!\r\n\r\nMy rockbox sansa device is still alive but my dad\'s bit the dust. I\'m hoping mine keeps going, though I am often using my android phone and this adaptor these days.','2018-07-19 06:51:17'),
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(2435,2596,'2018-07-19 15:28:22','Dave Morriss','Is English really so bad?','There\'s no doubt (in my mind anyway) that English is weird and difficult; annoying (at times) and illogical. Possibly because I was a bad student at school in my teens, I have never properly understood the whole issue of grammar, parsing sentences, past participles and all of that. However, I have always had a fascination with words, their meanings and their origins, and I think it\'s English that has led to that interest.\r\n\r\nOther languages also have their problems. I learnt French at school (and did a few years as an adult too) and never got to grips with the genders of nouns. Why is a table (furniture) feminine for example? How is it possible to remember them all? I still enjoy attempting to speak French nevertheless.\r\n\r\nYou point to the deficiencies of English with regard to the meaning of \"free\". Absolutely. That\'s a shortcoming. However, many other languages have their own idiosyncrasies. I worked at a university with a campus in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Bahasa Melayu, the local language, has a very different grammar compared to English. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_grammar for some aspects of it. I remember having conversations with Malay speakers, suggesting a English way of expressing a thing, to be told that that was pretty much impossible in their language. This led me to believe that English might be more subtle; though perhaps on the other hand it\'s more suitable for circumlocution, evasion and indirectness!\r\n\r\nAt school my French teacher was also an advocate of Esperanto. I wonder if that sort of language was what you had in mind instead of English? I don\'t know enough about its benefits to judge, but I wonder if a constructed language can really be as rich as a \"natural\" evolved language - even with all of its clutter and detritus.\r\n\r\nThanks for your comments - they really got me thinking.','2018-07-19 15:30:08'),
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(2436,2583,'2018-07-20 05:21:16','clacke','mp3 is not a real problem','The Fraunhofer Institute\'s US patents on mp3 have expired, so the mp3 format is no longer problematic in connection with free software.\r\n\r\nThe only reasons not to use mp3 these days are because it\'s two decades behind in codec evolution (e.g. Opus is strictly better in every aspect) and in envelope evolution (e.g. Matroska has better metadata and streaming facilities).','2018-07-20 07:47:31'),
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(2437,2596,'2018-07-20 13:41:04','Hipstre','Thanks so much!','I am pleased you responded with more etymological information. For some reason, knowing that kind of history really brings these things alive for me. I am enjoying the series.\r\n\r\nI hope at some later date there might be a connection to regular grammar and regular language. I\'ve always been fascinated by the connection between Noam Chomsky\'s linguistic work and the simultaneous development of Lisp at M.I.T.—both endeavors being obsessed with recursion.','2018-07-20 14:11:59'),
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(2438,2597,'2018-07-21 19:43:02','Hipstre','How to Fix a Remote','Thanks for this podcast. I\'ve run into the same problem. Once I cleaned my remote about three times it was done. The \"gunk\" in the remote that gets on the circuit board is generally some kind of silicone lubricant or solvent. Apparently, the button pads have to be cooked after they are made to get all the silicone gunk out, and most manufacturers don\'t bother any longer, as they assume you will only use the remote for a year or two before losing it (or you\'ll just buy a new one?).\r\n\r\nThe actual, physical act of pressing the button pushes the silicone gunk out of the pad.\r\n\r\nThanks for the guitar pick trick!','2018-07-21 19:53:56'),
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(2439,2596,'2018-07-22 00:02:03','bjb','the ownership apostrophe','I loved learning that the ownership-form of the apostrophe is really another example of a contraction.','2018-07-22 09:02:32'),
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(2440,2596,'2018-07-22 10:26:51','Dave Morriss','Hipstre\'s comments','I am fascinated by etymology. I learnt a lot of spelling and pronunciation by understanding word origins as a youngster, and spent a fair bit of time looking stuff up in a dictionary to find etymological information. I will try and share some of the historical context as I go for certain.\r\n\r\nI studied what was being called \"Comparative Psychology\" at university, and this involved looking at some of Chomsky\'s work. I wouldn\'t say I was very familiar with it now 40+ years later, but I\'m prepared to have another look.\r\n\r\nI expect these shows will become a series soon, and you will be very welcome to contribute to it. You are welcome to contribute now!','2018-07-22 10:28:22'),
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(2441,2600,'2018-07-23 00:59:38','NYbill','Ha!','I won\'t hear this till tomorrow, while driving at work. But, it is fitting that it happened to come out during the Hackers On Planet Earth conference. :D','2018-07-23 06:42:00'),
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(2442,2603,'2018-07-25 12:22:55','Hipstre','Nick Burns','Enjoyed the podcast.\r\n\r\nI find it to be very frustrating asking technical questions because a lot of guys want to humiliate people who ask them questions. Like Nick Burns. And I find that these guys often don\'t actually answer the question, because they aren\'t listening. They just listen until they hear a keyword, and then go into a rant.','2018-07-25 12:39:32'),
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(2443,2603,'2018-07-25 22:33:04','dodddummy','Related to humilation','There are lots of issues with how we ask and answer questions but related to humiliation specifically, what makes me really sad is when someone tells me they don\'t want to ask a question because the person or people they\'ll be asking humiliate them.\r\n\r\nOne of the reasons I will not publish the asker\'s name if they don\'t me want to.\r\n\r\nI first this seems like a weak person, but I\'ve had managers tell me the look down on people who don\'t know things. So I understand the hesitation to ask questions in an unfriendly environment.\r\n\r\nThere\'s a lot to learn and we might all be better off if we realize the person has skills, just maybe not in the same area you do.','2018-07-26 07:11:26'),
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(2444,2596,'2018-07-26 16:54:58','Dave Morriss','Re: Ownership apostrophe','Haha! I hadn\'t quite looked at it like that, but you are right.\r\n\r\nI like looking for logicality in language. Sometimes it\'s a vain search (as I\'m sure @klaatu would say), but a fair bit seems to conform to _somebody\'s_ idea of logic.','2018-07-26 16:59:41'),
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(2445,2603,'2018-07-27 02:19:51','Brenda J. Butler','People who waste my time by trying to find the answer for me.','I totally agree.\r\n\r\nAnd another thing that is annoying is when you ask a question and the person doesn\'t know the answer but either tells you a bunch of generalities that anyone would know, and/or tries to find the answer while you stand there, when you could go back to your desk and look for yourself. What I would like is a quick answer, even if it is \"I don\'t know\" or even \"I don\'t know off the top of my head\". They could throw in some keywords to search for, if they think it might help.','2018-07-27 09:05:48'),
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(2446,2603,'2018-07-27 11:42:52','Quick Answers','I failed to do this and I\'m sorry.','Brenda,\r\nThat is annoying! What I try to remember to do is to ask in the format of \"Don\'t spend time on this but do you know off the top of your head?\"\r\n\r\nBut recently, I asked someone a question I\'d already spent a lot of time researching and it appears that I couldn\'t do what I wanted to do. \r\n\r\nBut, as I said, if I think something should be possible, I won\'t let a \'No\' remain so and will ask again every few months. Even if it\'s a \'No\' now, things change quickly. \r\n\r\nAnyway, I forgot to add \'off the top of your head\' and I\'m afraid 1-2 hours might have been spent searching for me to return the first bit of text my researching revealed. \r\n\r\nI feel so bad about that slip of the tongue.','2018-07-27 11:47:28'),
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(2447,2605,'2018-07-28 02:30:04','ClintonRoy','Yowsers','Yikes. I really don\'t have much to say. I used to run away as a kid to get treats from the store next door, no trains nearby though..','2018-07-28 06:28:02'),
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(2448,2607,'2018-07-31 16:21:06','b-yeezi','Seems likea great teaching tool','Thanks for this episode. I\'ve heard of processing, but never knew what it was or how it could be useful. I will probably turn to this after scratch for my kids.','2018-07-31 16:58:11'),
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(2449,2608,'2018-08-02 04:13:15','cmhobbs','hurray battletech!','I haven\'t listened to the podcast yet but I have it queued for my morning walk. I hope you mentioned MegaMek and MekWars. As an avid btech fan, it\'s about the only way I can play these days because it\'s hard to get a tabletop game together sometimes.','2018-08-02 07:03:13'),
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(2450,2609,'2018-08-04 07:51:12','clacke','Thank you!','Excellent show as always! What SparkleShare is and how to use it at different expert levels, and when not to use it at all, is all thoroughly explained without the episide ever feeling long.\r\n\r\nBut most of all, thank you for paying off my episode debt to the community for me. I guess I owe you personally an episode now instead.','2018-08-04 09:00:55'),
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(2451,2542,'2018-08-04 07:55:12','clacke','Full episode on SparkleShare','For a complete rundown on the when, what and how of SparkleShare, see klaatu\'s https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2609 .','2022-02-14 13:25:07'),
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(2452,2608,'2018-08-06 05:40:34','tuturto','MegaMek and MekWars','MegaMek and MekWars I completely forgot as I was do excited to talk about the game. Truth to be told, there\'s so much to tell about the game that it\'s almost impossible to fit all of it in one episode even in a very superficial level.','2018-08-06 07:18:03'),
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(2453,2611,'2018-08-06 23:31:39','dodddummy','In case there was any doubt.','This is a quote from Klaatu today on Mastodon.\r\n\r\n\"Also, English is the worst language. I wish we\'d migrate away to something constructed and better, like Esperanto.\"','2018-08-07 09:19:17'),
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(2454,2612,'2018-08-07 17:27:05','Steve','Rockets!','Thanks for doing this interview. \"Concrete Dog\" looks like someone I could get along with quite well.','2018-08-07 18:07:51'),
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(2455,2614,'2018-08-09 14:08:39','hammerron','Tube Radio Show','What an awesome looking radio. You brought back several memories for me. I vaguely remember my dad having an old stand up unit in his barn/workshop. I had several push button channel selectors. Also, I once had a table top tube am radio with a clock (about the size of a toaster). Then lastly, your station playing \"Dark Lady\" Wow, I had that on a 45 (if anyone remembers those kind of recordings. Thank you Jon for the memories!','2018-08-09 14:15:15'),
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(2456,2612,'2018-08-09 21:57:59','Tony Hughes','Comment 1','Steve, Glad you enjoyed the show, it was an enjoyable interview to record.','2018-08-09 22:01:17'),
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(2457,2614,'2018-08-11 19:14:18','Jon Kulp','Tube clock radios','So glad you enjoyed this. Once you start looking around on the internet at vintage tube radios you find that there are TONS of these things, and the photo galleries are serious eye candy if you like mid-century modern industrial design. They also have lots of tube-powered clock radios like you described. Wish I had the money and the space to start collecting these things!','2018-08-11 19:18:59'),
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(2458,2615,'2018-08-12 00:55:28','Clinton Roy','Thank you.','Thank you for this, I appreciate your openness and the details.','2018-08-12 08:58:10'),
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(2459,2613,'2018-08-12 14:43:55','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this','Hi klaatu,\r\n\r\nThanks for this heads-up. It *is* a confusing feature of awk, but it\'s the same for sed (so at least the authors are consistent). I don\'t think we have emphasised it enough, on reflection.\r\n\r\nIt was highlighted in show 2 of the Awk series (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2129/full_shownotes.html#more-about-awk-programs) and has been used many times thereafter, but hasn\'t been emphasised.\r\n\r\nSo, thanks again for the feedback. It\'s most appreciated.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-14 13:25:07'),
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(2460,2617,'2018-08-14 18:35:17','Ken','Where is the script','Did we forget to include the script itself ?','2018-08-14 18:38:43'),
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(2461,2618,'2018-08-15 17:27:56','b-yeezi','Looking into this','Yesod seems like a great option for high-concurrency web applications. Thank you for introducing it to me and the rest of the HPR community.','2018-08-15 18:19:07'),
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(2462,2619,'2018-08-21 19:03:05','rtsn','comment','This was a great episode, thanks!','2018-08-21 19:49:27'),
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(2463,2620,'2018-08-23 01:04:58','baffled','Nice show','This is my first time commenting so I apologize in advance for any screw ups.\r\n\r\nI believe your point one to move to the new language as soon as\r\npossible is an excellent idea. I\'d also be interested in helping with\r\ndeveloping and discussing it should you decide to persue the notion.\r\n\r\nThere is a great book \"The Future of Learning - the Michell Thomas\r\nMethod\" by Michell Thomas Where he discusses his perspective on\r\neducation that I recommend as an interesting read.','2018-08-23 08:08:48'),
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(2464,2624,'2018-08-23 04:28:29','Clinton Roy','Fantastic','Encore!','2018-08-23 08:08:48'),
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(2465,2620,'2018-08-24 10:42:08','dodddummy','I have 2, do I hear 3?','baffled,\r\nYou make fewer screw ups than I do.\r\n\r\nI\'ll take a look at the Michell Thomas Method.\r\n\r\nI would definitely put time into developing this out if it seems like there\'s enough people willing to spend some time. Two might be enough. A couple more couldn\'t hurt.','2018-08-24 10:43:59'),
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(2466,2627,'2018-08-28 01:17:42','Mike Ray','Definition of hacking!','Brilliant show. This show is the real definition of hacking.\r\n\r\nIf I have this right, you found some Cisco phones in the garage of a neighbour and set about getting them to do something useful.\r\n\r\nThe joy of getting something to work is obvious from your tone of voice and your dialogue. Something that we all no doubt can identify with.\r\n\r\nAll the more satisfying when it is resurrecting something previously discarded','2018-08-28 08:57:44'),
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(2467,2622,'2018-08-28 05:43:18','Ken Fallon','Why is there no cute warning on this episode','Seriously a joy to listen to.','2018-08-28 08:57:44'),
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(2468,2627,'2018-08-28 19:36:03','b-yeezi','My sentiments exactly','This is the definition of hacking. I loved how you described your problem solving process. More of these, please!','2018-08-28 19:57:47'),
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(2469,2627,'2018-08-29 17:11:25','jezra','Absolutely spectacular','The best part of this wonderful hack (IMHO) is that you created something and then used that something to record an HPR episode.','2018-08-29 21:03:08'),
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(2470,2627,'2018-08-30 12:07:18','dodddummy','Scream, Yell, \"Bravo!\", also, this is called A Show','While I listen to ALL episodes of hpr, Sigflup is on my \'must watch NOW\' list. This one delivered in spaces for me. Not only was is fun to listen to, but I have similar equipment I\'ve been meaning to do something similar with.\r\n\r\nThere goes my last excuse.\r\n\r\nMy only regret is that after the excellent real hacking phone shows from the last two days, my horrible by comparison drivel is up today. \r\n\r\nSorry about that.','2018-08-30 12:32:28'),
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(2471,2628,'2018-08-30 12:14:36','dodddummy','Memories','Thoroughly enjoyed this episode. Due in large part to remembering the times read or listened to people talking about similar things in my youth. I did try some of them out but mostly read or listened to people describing the experience.','2018-08-30 12:57:07'),
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(2472,2627,'2018-08-30 12:34:29','Mike Ray','Stoop?','But what the hell is a stoop? Think we need an American/English dictionary here :-)','2018-08-30 12:57:07'),
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(2473,2622,'2018-08-30 23:56:53','dodddummy','Cuter than a box of puppies or kittens','If this ain\'t what hacking is about, then hacking ain\'t worth a plug nickel.','2018-08-31 08:03:30'),
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(2474,2627,'2018-09-01 02:24:15','Brenda J. Butler','stoop','A \"stoop\" is a set of cement steps up to your front door - not as big as a \"porch\". Hmm, not sure if it has to be cement.','2018-09-01 08:30:58'),
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(2475,2635,'2018-09-01 09:07:10','dodddummy','This is embarrassing','Enjoyed the show but given they fact I\'m a long time hercules user and a grey beard mainframer I\'m embarrassed I didn\'t do this show! Actually, I recorded this show more than once but thought it wouldn\'t make sense to someone new to the mainframe.\r\n\r\nI think you handled that problem well. Maybe this will inspire me enough to create some mainframe shows.\r\n\r\nI agree the moshix youtube channel is worth checking out for anyone interested in the mainframe.','2018-09-01 09:24:43'),
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(2476,2624,'2018-09-03 18:43:17','baffled','Very nice.','Your descriptions were excellent and enjoyable. Thank you very much\r\nfor sharing the trip through town with us.','2018-09-03 18:59:30'),
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(2477,2631,'2018-09-03 18:55:38','baffled','Cool show.','Hey, just wanted to let you know I thought it was a fun and interesting show. \r\n\r\nThanks also for the mention.','2018-09-03 18:59:30'),
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(2478,2631,'2018-09-03 18:58:23','baffled','Cool show.','Hey, just wanted to let you know I thought it was a fun and interesting show. \r\n\r\nThanks also for the mention.\r\n\r\nHmm, can I do this...Just wanted to add my two cents on the front notices to podcasts. I like the espeak announcements. Considering I\'m a blink that may be why. The theme music would be nice to have alternating versions to make them less tedious.','2018-09-03 21:03:45'),
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(2479,2549,'2018-09-04 15:16:27','archer72','Change to code location','Code for this episode is now at Notabug.org\r\n\r\nhttps://notabug.org/archer72/CD-DVD-ripping-on-Slackware','2018-09-04 15:20:09'),
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(2480,2635,'2018-09-08 02:10:15','Gavtres','Memories...','Ohhh... this episode brought back pleasant memories when PCs were just “toys” made to run WordPerfect, Lotus123, Harvard Graphics and Attachmate Extra TN3270 emulator. Thanks for the ride.','2018-09-08 09:45:00'),
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(2481,2615,'2018-09-09 13:23:15','A person','Thankyou','Thankyou Ahuka for your bravery, honesty and openness on this subject.\r\nHPR has a broad spectrum of listeners though one suspects many are people who, though younger than yourself, are acutely aware of a family history of certain cancers. This show gave a great insight into what one should expect if a diagnosis becomes a pressing concern, particularly with the state of modern medicine.\r\nAlso thank you for reiterating, one should always consult a medical professional for advice upon which to make a decison about treatment or any other course of action.','2018-09-09 13:54:06'),
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(2482,1919,'2018-09-10 04:01:54','Carpet Muncher',':)','very interesting. i love xoke\'s stuff','2018-09-10 08:00:36'),
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(2483,2637,'2018-09-13 05:00:37','Ken Fallon','WOW','Those that I know I use literally every day. Can\'t wait to try the rest out.\r\n\r\nPlease do a deep dive series on each. No pressure.','2018-09-13 08:36:01'),
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(2484,2639,'2018-09-14 05:22:37','Ken','Ahhhhhh','Always knew I needed spaces now I know why.\r\n\r\nThe evaluate zero thing seems strange.\r\n\r\nNote to self: stop using wc -l to count grep output.','2018-09-14 07:04:49'),
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(2485,2637,'2018-09-14 11:23:51','Beeza','Value of text conversion','I\'m a big fan of plain text and CSV files, as they are probably the formats that will last conceptually forever - unlike the Office formats we use today (including ODS/ODT etc). You may lose the layout information but the \"meat\" is always preserved.\r\n\r\nThe PDF to Text converters only work with documents which have been generated from a WP application. Scans of a printed document generally only produce an embedded JPG image.\r\n\r\nA few years ago I created a system that employed many of the commands you mention in your episode to convert a document into pure ASCII text, then create a non-repeating list of all the words it contains, along with an instance count (using SQL). By applying this to the contents of a document library the database was used to populate a \"search by keyword\" system for that library.\r\n\r\nPopulating the database from several hundred Word and PDF documents took only a couple of minutes. The subsequent keyword searches were very fast and produced a list of relevant documents ranked by the number of instances of the keyword. It was very easy to combine keywords using SQL \"AND\" and \"OR\" qualifiers.','2018-09-14 11:27:22'),
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(2486,2637,'2018-09-15 11:49:36','Jonas','Ranger, etc.','I\'m a die hard vimmer and have never heard of Ranger. I\'m looking forward to using it more. I asked a couple of my online Linuxey buddies and they used it years ago when they had less substantial machines. I still love the command line stuff even with my best machines. Everything is super quick in the terminal. \r\nThanks for the mention and your great shows. \r\nI need to explore jq for sure. I work with a database that saves a couple columns in JSON. It would be nice to query the exports in a more friendly way.','2018-09-15 12:03:00'),
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(2487,2637,'2018-09-15 15:34:53','Dave Morriss','Great show','I installed Ranger after listening to your show 1756 (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1756) but never used it and completely forgot about it. I was surprised to find it on my system and have been playing about with it a lot since listening to this show.\r\n\r\nI\'m a long-time text and command-line user but I tend to use Midnight Commander for the times I want to do a lot of file searching and manipulation, though I have to admit I use Dolphin sometimes in two-pane mode when I\'m doing things like copying files off an SD card. I shall add Ranger to the mix too I think.\r\n\r\nI agree with Ken: we need shows about all of the tools in your list!\r\n\r\nAnyway, this was a very welcome episode. Thanks.','2022-02-14 13:25:08'),
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(2488,2557,'2018-09-18 05:31:55','clacke','Update re: TOML in Nix','With Nix 2.1 ( https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#ssec-relnotes-2.1 ) reading TOML files has become a builtin function in Nix, just builtins.fromTOML /path/to/the/file.toml .\r\n\r\nI can\'t imagine this being unrelated to Mozilla\'s implementation in Nix.','2018-09-18 06:59:22'),
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(2489,2640,'2018-09-19 17:30:58','thelovebug','Audio quality','Good to hear from you again. I really enjoyed this episode, the audio quality was definitely on point... those little lapel mics are great!\r\n\r\nDon\'t worry too much about the structure of this episode, you were recording to make a point and you made it really well.','2018-09-19 17:48:32'),
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(2490,2637,'2018-09-20 03:07:44','clacke','Q','Never heard of Q before. Very cool! I will very likely find use for this.\r\n\r\nNot a very googlable name, but I found it here: https://harelba.github.io/q/','2018-09-20 08:29:51'),
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(2491,2644,'2018-09-20 05:50:27','clacke','Ken loves you','Now that\'s how you don\'t waste a good opportunity to make an HPR episode. I am observing and learning.','2018-09-20 08:29:51'),
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(2492,2644,'2018-09-20 05:57:34','clacke','Re: Kvalificerat hemligt','Oh, and I love Kvalificerat hemligt (and I love that Ken or Dave is going to have to pronounce it when reading this on the community show).\r\n\r\nDid you listen to Skeptikerpodden back when it was active and CJ was one of the people involved? That was a very good show, and I miss it.','2018-09-20 08:29:51'),
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(2493,2625,'2018-09-20 06:30:22','clacke','Accordion outro','Thank you MrX for that lovely accordion outro. Hadn\'t heard it before!','2018-09-20 08:29:51'),
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(2494,2625,'2018-09-20 06:45:00','clacke','Interesting idea','I\'m a tool person, so I really like the idea of using your tools to push yourself forward in your language learning. It\'s hard to say how it would turn out in practice, but I\'m optimistic.\r\n\r\nAs you mention, mixing vocabulary in languages that have very different grammars could become a bit strange, but code-switching -- that is, jumping back and forth between languages - is common and frequent with bilingual people, and it frequently happens mid-sentence, so I guess that just shows that people are pretty good at making it work even in radically different languages.\r\n\r\nThe area where I live has mostly Chinese Hongkongers, but many of them speak a lot of English in the office and at home, and it\'s pretty fun to listen to the kids on the playground and in the playroom talk to each other -- it\'s a real soup of Cantonese and English.','2018-09-20 08:29:51'),
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(2495,2639,'2018-09-21 07:28:12','johanv','Really interesting','I hadn\'t listened to HPR for a long time, but a couple of days ago I had some spare time, and I decided to listen to this episode. I liked it a lot, and today I am a little more aware about what I am actually doing while writing if statements with those square brackets in bash, and checking return codes.\r\n\r\nThanks for the interesting show!','2018-09-21 09:03:43'),
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(2496,2639,'2018-09-21 15:56:54','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feedback','Ken: Yes the arithmetic stuff evaluating to true/false is a bit counter-intuitive I think. Yes, grep is quite a powerful tool for use in scripts.\r\n\r\njohanv: Glad you found the show useful. I\'m trying to explain things that I never fully understood before, and to share what I have found as I do so.','2018-09-21 16:00:16'),
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(2497,2645,'2018-09-21 19:50:13','NYbill','Nice!','Ha ha, nice job Ken. It made me smile when I heard you happy it was finally blinking. And we got some live troubleshooting as well! Good stuff. \r\n\r\nYou know how I remembered which way a LED went way back when... One leg of the LED is cut off. \'Cut Off\' starts with a \'C\'. So does Cathode. The short leg is the cathode. If you had your leg cut off, that would be a pretty negative thing. The short leg is negative. \r\n\r\nJust a little mnemonic device I made up to help me remember. I still think of it to this day. \r\n\r\nNow, you just need to build one of the oscilloscope kits. You know, to see how fast your LED is blinking. \r\n\r\nSee how I did that? Its how we get more shows. ;)','2018-09-21 20:09:42'),
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(2498,2645,'2018-09-22 04:42:42','tuturto','great show','These troubleshooting shows are one of my favourites. I did tinker just a tiny bit with electronics at school, but never invested enough time to really understand what electricity is all about. Especially the analog electronics is sort of black magic to me :)\r\n\r\nBut I love listening when someone is working with it, explaining what they\'re doing and slowly working their way through a problem.','2018-09-22 08:14:44'),
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(2499,2644,'2018-09-24 06:45:40','folky','Rere: Kvalificerat hemligt','Yes, I did listen to Skeptikerpodden and I miss it. For some time I listened to Kvack! after it ended, but that\'s not really a good replacement. To be honest, Kvack! is one of those podcasts I meant with \"got tired of\".\r\nWe really need some podcast in Swedish (and German too) in the tradition and quality of SGU.','2018-09-24 07:15:34'),
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(2500,2650,'2018-09-28 05:43:14','Ken Fallon','Milkbag wtf','What pray is a milkbag.\r\n\r\nAlso soundscape tour of the falls please','2018-09-28 06:59:28'),
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(2501,2648,'2018-09-28 23:11:17','NYbill','Thanks pal','Yea, do continue this series. I recently got my Tech license. I\'ll go for the General soon. \r\n \r\nIts nice to have someone explain what you might see if/when you get an actual radio. Because, walking into this cold, it just looks like a lot of buttons!','2018-09-29 06:43:33'),
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(2502,2651,'2018-09-30 12:51:25','Ken Fallon','The loop issue','This fails\r\n\r\nls *.mp3|while read i;do ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\n\r\n\r\nThis works\r\n\r\nfor i in *.mp3;do ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\n,/pre>','2018-09-30 13:53:34'),
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(2503,2651,'2018-09-30 14:00:47','Dave Morriss','Re: The loop issue','ls *.mp3|while read i;do ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\n\r\nYou don\'t say how this fails, but there are several reasons not to do things this way:\r\n\r\n1. It\'s unwise to feed a \'while\' loop thorough a pipe because the \'while\' runs\r\nin a separate shell which can lead to problems\r\n\r\n2. Never use \'ls\' to get a list of files for consumption in a script. Unless\r\nyou can be completely sure that the \'ls\' you are using isn\'t adding suffixes\r\nlike \'@\' for links, and \'/\' for directories and isn\'t adding colour codes to\r\nthe names, don\'t do it. Much better to use \'find\'.\r\n\r\nMy test with this pipeline returned colour codes which \'ffmpeg\' didn\'t like,\r\nand it failed that way.\r\n\r\nfor i in *.mp3;do ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\n\r\nThis doesn\'t use \'ls\' it simply uses file expansion therefore no additional\r\nfilename garbage!\r\n\r\nDid I mention: don\'t use \'ls\' as a way of feeding filenames to a loop or\r\nwhatever?\r\n\r\nThe first example would have worked if you\'d written:\r\n\r\nwhile read i;do ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done < <(find . -maxdepth 1 -name \"*.mp3\")\r\n\r\nThe \'-maxdepth 1\' option prevents \'find\' from going into sub-directories. The\r\n\'find\' is inside a process substitution which is redirected to the \'while\' so\r\nthe \'read\' inside it can obtain what is produced on its STDIN channel.\r\n\r\nAlso, if it had been me I\'d have written:\r\n\r\nffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\"\r\n\r\nas:\r\n\r\nffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i%mp3}wav\"\r\n\r\nto avoid the output files being called \'xxx.mp3.wav\'. I spoke about this in my\r\n\"Bash Tips\" show https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1648\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-14 13:25:08'),
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(2504,2651,'2018-09-30 14:13:58','Ken Fallon','Clarify','I\'m not sure you\'re cleare enough about using ls.\r\n\r\nIt fails as it only does one mp3, while while does them all.','2018-09-30 14:28:12'),
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(2505,1512,'2018-09-30 14:19:53','Ken Fallon','Ahhh so that\'s what counterpoint is.','Polyphonic had a video about Scarborough Fair/Canticle: How Simon and Garfunkel Created a Timeless Song, and it struck me what counterpoint was.','2018-09-30 14:28:12'),
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(2506,2651,'2018-09-30 15:02:06','Dave Morriss','Re: Clarify','I think the thing to take away is: Don\'t use \'ls\' for this purpose. I might have said that before ;-)\r\n\r\nOne way to debug your problem (should you feel that avoiding \'ls\' is not enough) might be this:\r\n\r\n1. Create a function to display the arguments:\r\n\r\n_ffmpeg() { printf \"ffmpeg %s %s %sn\" \"${@}\"; }\r\n\r\n2. Run your pipeline thus:\r\n\r\nls *.mp3|while read i;do _ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\n\r\nI tested things like this:\r\n\r\n$ cd /tmp\r\n$ touch {a..f}.mp3\r\n$ ls *.mp3|while read i;do _ffmpeg -i \"${i}\" \"${i}.wav\" 2>&1;done\r\nffmpeg -i a.mp3 a.mp3.wav\r\nffmpeg -i b.mp3 b.mp3.wav\r\nffmpeg -i c.mp3 c.mp3.wav\r\nffmpeg -i d.mp3 d.mp3.wav\r\nffmpeg -i e.mp3 e.mp3.wav\r\nffmpeg -i f.mp3 f.mp3.wav\r\n\r\nThe names like \'a.mp3\' are all coloured blue.\r\n\r\nIf I use the real \'ffmpeg\' I get (output heavily truncated with only one file shown):\r\n\r\nffmpeg version 4.0.2-2 Copyright (c) 2000-2018 the FFmpeg developers\r\n built with gcc 8 (Debian 8.2.0-7)\r\n configuration: --prefix=/usr --extra-version=2 --toolchain=hardened \r\n\r\n[snip]\r\n\r\n libswresample 3. 1.100 / 3. 1.100\r\n libpostproc 55. 1.100 / 55. 1.100\r\n?[0m?[00;36ma.mp3?[0m: No such file or directory\r\n\r\nThe codes before and after \'a.mp3\' are colour on/off codes.\r\n\r\nYour environment will certainly be different of course, so your failures may not be the same.\r\n\r\nClear?','2018-09-30 15:04:41'),
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(2507,2651,'2018-09-30 15:08:27','Dave Morriss','Does the comment system remove backslashes?','I actually wrote:\r\n\r\n_ffmpeg() { printf \"ffmpeg %s %s %s\\n\" \"${@}\"; }\r\n\r\nbut something removed the backslash.','2018-09-30 15:10:43'),
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(2508,2651,'2018-10-01 11:03:53','folky','Material for a show','@Ken and @Dave\r\nTake your comments and make a collaborative show of the material ;-)','2018-10-01 11:35:17'),
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(2509,2651,'2018-10-01 12:16:59','Ken Fallon','touché Sir','touché','2018-10-01 12:47:40'),
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(2510,2650,'2018-10-01 14:41:10','Shane Shennan','Link about Milk Bags','Hi, Ken! The following link will tell you more than you ever wanted to know about bagged milk. :) This is how milk is generally sold in Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, and probably in the other Canadian Provinces and Territories as well.\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_bag','2018-10-01 14:57:30'),
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(2511,2651,'2018-10-01 14:59:05','clacke','subshell issues','As Dave points out, the while loop you describe would work if it weren\'t for ls issues. Here\'s what doesn\'t work:\r\n\r\nitems=()\r\nproduce_items | while read item; items+=( \"$item\" ); done\r\ndo_stuff_with \"${items[@]}\"\r\n\r\nOh, how many times I have made this mistake.\r\n\r\n\"items\" gets updated just fine, in a subshell, and then after the pipe has finished executing, execution continues in the parent shell where the array is still empty.\r\n\r\nNull-terminating and giving \"read\" the appropriate parameters is an HPR episode of its own, no doubt already made by Dave, or in his pipeline. ;-)','2018-10-01 15:03:52'),
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(2512,2651,'2018-10-01 15:00:26','clacke','Kvalificerat hemligt','Excellent pronuncation, Dave! You\'re spot on.\r\n\r\nCompared to \"kvalificerat hemligt\", \"skeptikerpodden\" is trivial to say. :-)','2018-10-01 15:03:52'),
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(2513,2644,'2018-10-01 15:10:58','clacke','Re: Kvalificerat hemligt','I\'ve stopped listening to Kvack! too. I like the people, and I enjoy listening to them hanging out, but in the limited time I have and the massive amount of content out there, that\'s not enough to put the podcast in the queue. It\'s too much opinion and too little education and insightful analysis.\r\n\r\nI quite like https://theesp.eu/ as well, but it\'s also far from SGU levels in relevance and production values. Unfair perhaps, as SGU has over a decade of podcasting under their belt, but that\'s how it is.','2022-02-14 13:25:08'),
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(2514,2627,'2018-10-01 15:25:03','clacke','Re: stoop','That explains why it\'s a \"stoop sale\"!\r\n\r\n(which is a garage sale, which is like a yard sale, if you live in Brooklyn ...)','2018-10-01 15:31:03'),
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(2515,2651,'2018-10-01 15:34:27','clacke','Re: Intro volume','While it is true that we hosts could do more to manage our sound levels, the facts on the ground are that the intro music is louder than the average show.\r\n\r\nI have thought often that the intro volume should be a bit lower, but never said anything.','2018-10-01 15:38:48'),
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(2516,2651,'2018-10-01 15:36:05','Dave Morriss','She sells subshells...','I think I have to do a show on the whole issue of loops in pipelines. It\'s been in the \"topics to cover\" heap for a while but now it\'s being re-prioritised! I\'ll probably make it show 14 in the \"Bash Tips\" subset.','2018-10-01 15:38:48'),
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(2517,2651,'2018-10-01 15:39:43','clacke','Re: TTS over intro music','We could still allow people to add arbitrary intros, and just not do TTS-over-intro in those cases. But the idea to do TTS-over-intro on a list of prepared flexible-length intros is really cool.\r\n\r\nAs for me though, as you have noticed on my shows, I really like having a standardized intro as the unified HPR brand, while allowing some variation at the end.','2018-10-01 15:48:53'),
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(2518,2651,'2018-10-01 16:43:35','clacke','That brings back memories','I never listen to my own shows via the feed, so I never listen to my whistling outro either.\r\n\r\nAs I hear it now, man does that bring back memories. I remember exactly where I was walking on the way to my bus to work as I was recording it. That was three homes, one country, three offices, three kindergartens and three years ago.\r\n\r\nI can feel the chill from the November morning fog around Järfälla Church on my cheeks as I\'m typing this.\r\n\r\nI know that I accidentally set the sample rate too low when I recorded it (11.25 kHz, I believe), but hearing it now that sound quality is worse than I remember it. :-)','2018-10-01 16:50:40'),
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(2519,1512,'2018-10-02 22:20:47','Jon Kulp','Talk about reviving...','Ken, are you just now getting around to listening to this episode? Whoever thought this old thing would get brought back from the dead haha! Anyway yes, counterpoint is the art of combining melodies. :)','2018-10-03 07:07:38'),
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(2520,2635,'2018-10-03 06:16:53','Jan','Second Reading','Hi there,\r\n\r\ni just listen a second time and say \"Thanks for the effort made.\"','2018-10-03 07:07:38'),
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(2521,2640,'2018-10-03 15:59:17','MrX','Re Audio quality','Hi thelovebug, many thanks for the kind comment glad you enjoyed the show, yes I couldn\'t believe what a difference it made swapping microphones.','2018-10-03 16:01:38'),
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(2522,2648,'2018-10-03 16:05:08','MrX','Re Thanks pas','Hi NYbill many thanks for the comment glad you liked the show, yes as you could tell from the show I didn\'t know what a few of the controls did, so it will indeed be bewildering to start with. I\'ve tried to fill in some of the gaps in the show notes, \r\n\r\nAll the best \r\n\r\nMrx','2018-10-03 16:43:45'),
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(2523,2134,'2018-10-07 16:59:58','david pellecchia','systemd service','Top Man!\r\nMany thanks for posting your information regarding systemd services. I\'ve been pulling my hair out trying to work out why my pre-shutdown script would not fire. Then I found your post.\r\nA very big thank you to you.','2018-10-07 17:13:14'),
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(2524,1308,'2018-10-08 12:01:41','Gort','Computer Intro Outline','This is a fine beginners list. It hits all the \"big pieces\" of the tools set and forms a solid foundation for continued learning. This is neat, succinct, and is an outstanding resource. Thanks for putting this together.','2018-10-08 12:06:24'),
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(2525,2654,'2018-10-08 16:13:24','lostnbronx','Great Recipe','I just made a simple breakfast using your recipe. It was easy and delicious. I used brown sugar and cinnamon, and it was a hit. Great content, thanks for uploading!','2018-10-08 16:18:52'),
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(2526,2654,'2018-10-09 05:49:42','Jonas','How I make crepes','This is so good. Thanks for the show. I always wonder how other people make similar things I like. \r\nAs it happens, I just made crepes yesterday. \r\nI have no idea why my Texas mom started making crepes, but I just remember having them at home as a kid. \r\nI don\'t know if what I do is technically called a crepe but it\'s very crepe like, or maybe more super thin pancake like. \r\nI\'m not much of a measurer. I typically start with 1 to 1.5 cups flour and add a couple table spoons to 1/4 cup of sugar depending on the day. I also add lots of cinnamon. 1/4 teaspoon to a half table spoon. Again depending on the amount of flour, the sugar and cinnamon increases. \r\nThis is basically a dessert crepe.\r\nAfter whisking the dry together with a 1/8 teaspoon of salt or or less, I add 3/4 cup of milk. If the mix isn\'t watery enough, add more milk until pretty thin. Then add an egg and beat in completely. \r\nI have a gas stove, so I put the flame on to just above as low as it can go without going out. I let that heat a stainless pan for several minutes, while putting the other things together. More flame if you know what you\'re doing. You want the pan to be the right temp before putting in the first drizzle of batter. \r\nI like to use a cake decorating bottle to put the batter in the pan. Get the bottles at Ross, a discount store, or at the dreaded Wal-Mart. You could probably enlarge the opening on one of the $.99 ketchup/mustard squeeze bottles, but they are not clear like the decorating bottles. \r\n\r\nJust before putting the batter in the pan, swirl around then end of a stick of butter just enough to wet the pan. Start at the center of the pan with a splash of batter making an ever widening circle until you cover 2/3 of the pan. If the batter is thin enough it will spread itself. Otherwise you can pick up and jostle the pan to flatten more. I generally cook until the edges curl and the top starts looking less wet, then flip and cook the other side 10-20 seconds to firm up top side.','2018-10-09 07:02:21'),
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(2527,2654,'2018-10-10 00:18:29','Shane Shennan','Brown Sugar!','lostnbronx, I am glad you got a good breakfast out of my episode.\r\n\r\nI never thought of making the cinnamon sugar with brown sugar! I have always used white sugar. I\'m going to try your way when my cinnamon sugar container is empty.','2018-10-10 07:12:29'),
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(2528,2654,'2018-10-10 00:24:30','Shane Shennan','Thanks for sharing your technique!','Jonas, thanks for sharing your method. I like the way you put the cinnamon right into the batter, instead of using it as a topping. I also liked your tip of using a cake decorating bottle.','2018-10-10 07:12:29'),
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(2529,2608,'2018-10-10 03:17:03','Bookewyrmm','Fandom','Great show, it\'s good to know there are other fans of Battle Tech out there! Do you also play MechWarrior Online and howndonyoi feel about the latest entry in the Mech Warrior single player game?','2018-10-10 07:12:29'),
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(2530,2657,'2018-10-10 14:04:04','Brian in Ohio','Mr Baten\'s shows','Do you have any ideas on how to solve these problems? I\'ll crawl under my rock now.','2018-10-10 14:08:59'),
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(2531,2658,'2018-10-11 06:01:13','Ken Fallon','This does NOT have to apply to HPR shows.','Great tips. Seriously.\r\n\r\nI need to temper this show with our HPR motto of \"any audio is better than no audio.\". We always put content over audio quality. \r\n\r\nWhile this may loose us listners, it gains us hosts.\r\n\r\nSure always try and record the best you can, but dont ever let it get in the way of submitting the show. Perfection leads to procrastination. \"It aint a show unless its on the server.\"','2018-10-11 07:55:32'),
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(2532,1308,'2018-10-12 18:35:10','Shane Shennan','Thanks, Gort!','Thank you for your comment! I\'m glad that this episode still makes sense over five years after it was recorded.','2018-10-12 18:37:00'),
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(2533,2640,'2018-10-14 08:07:33','lostnbronx@gmail.com','Great Sound Quality','What an improvement! I confess, I couldn\'t even finish the last ep due to the audio quality (and my standards are low), but this episode has fantastic sound. Great job!','2018-10-14 09:15:54'),
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(2534,2657,'2018-10-14 20:53:24','dodddummy','You keep putting out my shows before I do!','Here\'s another show I\'ve recorded but didn\'t publish. I am in the process of editing this one though. You do a better job than I do, however. Perhaps I should sit back and revel in the fact that you\'re pulling my weight!\r\n\r\nI enjoyed the show, and obviously agree. I\'m still going to submit my episode; but will edit it touch on things you didn\'t.\r\n\r\nI really do wonder if people can look at the rate of change in the rate of change and not think that it\'s accelerating and just about everything that looks too pitiful now to take over our jobs, will continue in that state forever.\r\n\r\nIn my mind you only need to look at Boston Robotics. People were citing the fact that Atlas kept falling over as evidence that he\'d never perform as well as humans. A couple short years later and he\'s performing feats similar to parkour.\r\n\r\nCan we really not imagine how a couple of cycles of Moore\'s law\'s worth of improvement looks?','2018-10-14 20:57:18'),
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(2535,2657,'2018-10-19 09:10:39','Denise','The podcast content','Its an interesting topic you bring up. personally I am appalled by scarecrow tactics. I\'d like to offer a different view. There is lots wrong with capitalism. First thing is that capitalists believe their system is the only answer. The hangover after our last industrial revolution gave us shorter working days, safety rules and employee rights at work. Currently there is lots of demand out there for sabbaticals or people taking a break. so hell yeah, give me a robot who does my job so I can recover from stress, spend time with my children or travel, do volunteer work. Why do we doubt Basic income? currently those breaks are only available for the rich or singles or childless. Have you seen a happy cashier? Have you heard a mine worker shouting: yes - let\'s continue ruining my lung instead of giving me proper training so I can work in a solar panel farm. and for the doctors! I have met so many who were an utter waste of my time. yes, give me the Watson system. I had to retrain in my job 3 times over the last 6 years. it has been hard. it doesn\'t have to be! As you say, Robots give us an opportunity to focus on the things that matter in life. We dont have to run anymore all the time. Robots guarantee a basic level of productivity. We can find better and creative solutions to provide proper pay for people who work in the care. We can focus on figuring out why our society still struggles with all kinds of abuse, why we do not trust anyone, why we feel the need to destroy our beautiful world. we have a universe to explore and the complex systems in our world. and if there is the odd person not willing to work, then that\'s okay too. People have reasons! Capitalists only know the word more. When will you read all the books that keep accumulating on your bookshelf because you shouted MORE. There is no time because I have to be social, I have to take care of children, because I have to declare taxes, have to have that lawsuit with my neighbour, have to go to work, have to cl','2018-10-19 13:21:59'),
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(2536,2666,'2018-10-22 01:42:10','Clinton Roy','systemd information','If you have any particular systemd problems, I could be poked into recording a show to help out with them?','2018-10-22 08:46:09'),
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(2537,2667,'2018-10-23 18:09:38','b-yeezi','gcj deprecated','It\'s a shame that PDFtk is basically going away because the GCJ runtime has been deprecated by most major distros. PDFTK still lives on as a Snap. Also, there is a fork that uses openJDK instead. You can reference this Stack Overflow post:\r\n\r\nhttps://askubuntu.com/questions/1028522/how-can-i-install-pdftk-in-ubuntu-18-04-bionic','2018-10-23 18:16:12'),
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(2538,2667,'2018-10-24 00:59:02','Clinton Roy','debian','I\'m rather confused about why there\'s a reliance on any particular java runtime, but at least on debian, if i request pdftk to be installed, pdftk-java is installed, and yeah, no screwing around required.','2018-10-24 06:56:03'),
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(2539,2666,'2018-10-24 20:42:46','Brian in Ohio','wicd','Love any show that talks about slackware. The network setup you suggested is the best way to go about it but if you want to use wicd you first must install it. If you have the slackware disk its in the extras folder and can de installed using installpkg. You don\'t need to go out to a repository its in the installation media, just not installed by default. Thanks for doing a show about slackware, support Pat!','2018-10-24 22:15:35'),
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(2540,2608,'2018-10-25 06:31:03','tuturto','MechWarrior online','I haven\'t played MechWarrior online or the new BattleTech computer game (although the latter one is on my list of things to try out at some point). I love seeing new games coming out for the BattleTech world and getting new fans into BattleTech universe.','2018-10-25 08:14:20'),
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(2541,2677,'2018-10-22 22:01:53','dodddummy','Looks like I forgot to tuncate silence','Sorry about that.','2018-10-26 07:20:17'),
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(2542,2669,'2018-10-26 10:17:21','Mad Sweeney','Quoted Literals in Regex','Hi,\r\n\r\nIt seems the rule of quoted literals doesn\'t apply if the RHS is a variable. So a variable with a quoted \".\" would try to match a quote followed by . followed by another quote.\r\nIf you wanted to match a quote in a literal RE you would have to write \".\"\r\nThe following Bash snippet illustrates:\r\n\r\n#!/bin/bash \r\n \r\nv=0 \r\nfor r in \'^a.b$\' \'^a\".\"b$\' \"^a\'.\'b$\"; do \r\n ((v++)) \r\n # matches var 1 only \r\n [[ a.b =~ $r ]] && echo match var $v \r\n # matches var 2 only \r\n [[ \'a\".\"b\' =~ $r ]] && echo match double quote $v \r\n # matches var 3 only \r\n [[ \"a\'.\'b\" =~ $r ]] && echo match single quote $v \r\n # all 3 match \r\n eval \"[[ a.b =~ $r ]] && echo match eval $v\" \r\ndone \r\n\r\nI find the numerous ways of testing in Bash confusing. I have to look up the manual every time I come back to Bash scripting. I hope posting about it will help keep it in the brain.\r\n\r\n--Mad','2018-10-26 13:09:59'),
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(2543,2669,'2018-10-26 14:12:00','Mad Sweeney','Re: Quoted Literals in Regex','It also seems like HPR comments eats backslashes!\r\nHere\'s my comment showing where backslashes should be.\r\nWould be good if there was a preview comment option:\r\n\r\nIt seems the rule of quoted literals doesn\'t apply if the RHS is a variable. So a variable with a quoted \".\" would try to match a quote followed by . followed by another quote.\r\nIf you wanted to match a quote in a literal RE you would have to write {backslash}\"{backslash}.{backslash}\"\r\nA literal RE \".\" would be like unquoted {backslash}.\r\nThe following Bash snippet illustrates:\r\n\r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\nv=0\r\nfor r in \'^a{backslash}.b$\' \'^a\".\"b$\' \"^a\'.\'b$\"; do\r\n ((v++))\r\n # matches var 1 only\r\n [[ a.b =~ $r ]] && echo match var $v\r\n # matches var 2 only\r\n [[ \'a\".\"b\' =~ $r ]] && echo match double quote $v\r\n # matches var 3 only\r\n [[ \"a\'.\'b\" =~ $r ]] && echo match single quote $v\r\n # all 3 match\r\n eval \"[[ a.b =~ $r ]] && echo match eval $v\"\r\ndone','2018-10-26 15:31:10'),
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(2544,2669,'2018-10-26 15:23:27','Stuart Little','quoting portions of regex','Re: the previous comment by Mad Sweeney:\r\n\r\nYou can quote portions of variables on the RHS just fine, but for the match to work the overall pattern you\'re trying to match must not be enclosed in *outer* quotes. So for instance, the following modification of your script works fine (matches): \r\n\r\n---\r\n server=\"hackerpublicradio.org\"\r\n\r\nfor re in \r\n publicradio\".\"org\r\ndo\r\n echo \"Using regular expression: $re\"\r\n if [[ $server =~ $re ]]; then\r\n echo \"This is HPR\"\r\n else\r\n echo \"No match\"\r\n fi\r\ndone\r\n---\r\n\r\nNote that there are no outside quotes on publicradio\".\"org. \r\n\r\nThe issue was visible from the echoes given out by bash. When you received the message\r\n\r\nUsing regular expression: ^(hacker|hobby)publicradio\".\"org$\r\nNo match\r\n\r\nyou can see bash was searching for actual quotes around the period, which of course are not there in the string $server.','2018-10-26 15:35:46'),
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(2545,2669,'2018-10-26 22:23:16','Mad Sweeney','Re: Quoted Literals in Regex','The quirk Dave refers to is that you can remove the meta-status of a character in a literal RHS by quoting it so abc\'.\'def only matches abc.def but not abcxdef, and that it seems there is no way to do that using a regex in a variable: in a variable you only have the traditional backslash escape which you can also use in a literal regex.\r\n\r\n--Mad','2018-10-27 09:30:36'),
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(2546,2669,'2018-10-27 10:09:51','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the combined wisdom being directed at my question','Thanks to Mad Sweeney and Stuart Little for commenting on this issue.\r\n\r\nIn the light of your comments my simple tests were these:\r\n\r\n$ [[ \'axb\' =~ a.b ]] && echo \"Match\"\r\nMatch\r\n- The RE on the right uses \'.\' as a metacharacter\r\n\r\n$ [[ \'axb\' =~ a\'.\'b ]] && echo \"Match\"\r\n- The \"meta-ness\" of the \'.\' is removed by quoting, so no match\r\n\r\n$ [[ \'a.b\' =~ a\'.\'b ]] && echo \"Match\"\r\nMatch\r\n- Proving that a literal match works\r\n\r\n$ re=\"a\'.\'b\"\r\n$ [[ \'a.b\' =~ $re ]] && echo \"Match\"\r\n- Now the match fails if the RE is in a variable\r\n\r\n$ eval \"[[ \'a.b\' =~ $re ]] && echo Match\"\r\nMatch\r\n- Following Mad Sweeney\'s lead, the \'eval\' substitutes in the contents of \'$re\' so it looks to the extended test like the literal string we used earlier, and thus it works.\r\n\r\nMy working hypothesis is that the Bash logic processing this can deal with quoted metacharacters in a \"bare string\" but isn\'t used when the RE is in a variable - or maybe in any case where expansion is needed to provide the RHS argument.\r\n\r\nYou\'d have to think this was a bug I guess.','2018-10-27 10:24:13'),
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(2547,2669,'2018-10-27 10:31:10','Dave Morriss','Backslashes in comments','Yes, there\'s a bug in the comment code (or what I call a bug).\r\n\r\nI think that, in the spirit of avoiding the \"Little Bobby Tables\" error the comment text is being sanitised, but the sanitisation includes backslash removal.\r\n\r\nYou can include a backslash at the moment, but you need to double it: backslash \'\\\'\r\n\r\nWe\'ll have a look at this issue.\r\n\r\nDave','2018-10-27 10:33:33'),
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(2548,2669,'2018-10-27 21:37:10','Mad Sweeney','Not just backslashes','It\'s eating ampersands too! Grrrrrrrrrrrrr!','2018-10-27 21:48:09'),
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(2549,2669,'2018-10-27 22:00:20','Dave Morriss','Comments eating ampersands?','I don\'t see evidence of ampersand eating. Could you point to an example?\r\n\r\nMy earlier comment #5 had ampersands galore and they are all visible, unless I\'m missing something. They are being turned into HTML entities of course, but that\'s what you\'d expect.','2018-10-27 22:02:37'),
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(2550,2669,'2018-10-27 23:59:10','Mad Sweeney','Re: Comments eating ampersands?','Apologies Dave, It\'s a bug in the screen reader: reading one ampersand where there are two.\r\n[I must dump all this proprietary as soon as possible.]','2018-10-28 09:59:49'),
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(2551,2667,'2018-10-31 09:18:23','Klaatu','Thanks for the snap tip','I install and use pdftk on Slackware, so far without any issue. It\'s good to know about its availability in snap packages, though...just in case.','2018-10-31 14:21:26'),
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(2552,2668,'2018-10-31 22:33:51','Michael','Great Episodes!','Thank you for doing this, I love these episodes. They keep me smiling and occasionally screaming at the podcast player. You can be such a sadist, you know? :-) When describing the tuner: \"It\'s quite interesting to hear\" - \"I\'m not gona do that...\" Please let us hear! Sure you could find a way, like letting it tune up a dummy load or something. \r\nOn the same token, please use the radio in front of you to create audible examples. How does a signal sound, that is suffering from spark distortions and how is it improved by engaging the noise blanker?\r\n\r\nPlease don\'t get me wrong - the one who puts out shows is right. Your show, your choice. Please keep them coming the way you like to do them.\r\n\r\nOne more comment to the content: Hearing relays clicking is not necessarily attributed to the age of the transceiver. Even in modern gear the filter in the high power transmit path are switched by relays. I have seen \"Relay switched band filter.\" for receive as a selling point to indicate that there is no negative impact from the switching diodes. These can affect RF performance under certain conditions.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2018-10-31 22:38:05'),
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(2553,2629,'2018-11-01 04:36:52','Joel H.','Good ideas!','I just wanted to leave a quick comment about this show!\r\nI think the ideas and theories you presented in this episode are very good. With the contents of this episode alone, I believe someone could make an excellent video game. You\'ve done a good job at working out edge cases and small details to encourage learning.\r\n\r\nA point-and-click game sounds OK, but I was wondering about what you think of these ideas in a first-person exploration game, something similar to \"The Stanley Parable\"?','2018-11-01 09:35:45'),
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(2554,2668,'2018-11-01 07:29:43','lostnbronx','Great Gear!','Wonderful mic, and VERY classy meter! Great ep, over all!','2018-11-01 09:35:45'),
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(2555,2674,'2018-11-01 10:49:58','Jason Lewis','Volume','The audio is goo quiet','2018-11-01 10:52:02'),
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(2556,2675,'2018-11-05 09:26:42','Gus','Praise','Thank you for two excellent tips, both how to manage youtube playlists and the Iridium plugin. It works great!','2018-11-05 09:50:38'),
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(2557,2675,'2018-11-06 02:06:16','Ahuka','MY pleasure','I\'m glad you found this useful. That is why I record shows, to share with the community.','2018-11-06 08:20:19'),
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(2558,2676,'2018-11-06 02:08:22','Ahuka','What were you going to say?','I noticed that on my shows you kept saying \"we\'ll get back to that\", but I don\'t think you ever did. Did you have a comment to give?','2018-11-06 08:20:19'),
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(2559,2562,'2018-11-06 02:08:45','FiftyOneFifty','Getting paid in Cryptocurrency','This is a respond to hpr2562 :: \"I bought a laptop\". Tangential to the main topic, I was intrigued to learn you are paid cryptocurrency. You did not mention which type, but given the volatility in the better known cryptocurrencies, I’m curious how that might effect one’s income. I’m sending this to your e-mail referenced on the HPR website, but I’m also posting these questions to the show comments, so any listener who gets paid in cryptocurrency can weigh in. I’d rather hear from community members whom a significant portion of their income comes in the form of cryptocurrency, but maybe someone who makes extra money from a hobby or side project can contribute their tales of fortunes won and lost. At this time, I’m not asking for stories from miners or people who lost their stash do to alleged malfeasance (i.e., Mt. Gox).\r\n\r\n1. You said you were paid in cryptocurrency. Is this in the form of you get the equivalent of X Euros (replace with relevant national currency) a week based on the current exchange rate or is it fixed at Y units of cryptocurrency?\r\n2. If the latter answer to #1, what happens if the bottom drops out of said cryptocurrency? Are you under contract, stuck working for nothing? I guess the corollary would be what happens when cryptocurrency goes so high the company can’t afford to pay you?\r\n3. Has volatility in the cryptocurrency market effected your financial status. In other words, have you ever made plans based on a sudden uptick in your cryptocurrency savings, only to have them dashed when the bubble burst?\r\n\r\nAlmost a year ago, my non-techie friends started asking me about Bitcoin. By that time, Bitcoin was in it’s first stages of it’s upwards ramp. I really hadn’t been paying attention, but suddenly Bitcoin was all over the news as this magical money tree that no-one knew existed. I warned my friends that I thought the bubble was speculator driven, and would burst as fast as it had inflated.','2018-11-06 08:20:19'),
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(2560,2558,'2018-11-06 02:29:00','FiftyOneFifty','You missed one','OK, probably more than one, I can see why English is so hard if it is not your first language. Amazing we forced it down the world\'s throat as the universal tongue, over Latin and French. Yeah team Anglo? \r\n\r\nAnyway, in a future episode, you should reference affect/effect. I also learned something else. No American would think of using tenant as a verb. That\'s another elephant in the room. In the US, we reference ourselves with a term that applies to an entire hemisphere. The topic abounds on YouTube, British vs USA culture. Maybe we should open this up internationally and ask for third parties to tell us why we are both farking nuts?','2018-11-06 08:20:19'),
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(2561,2676,'2018-11-07 23:30:05','dodddummy','Smiling all the way to the end.','Loved the addition of RMS\' rendition. However, I didn\'t not intend to replace Ken\'s version.','2018-11-07 23:48:09'),
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(2562,2676,'2018-11-07 23:38:30','dodddummy','Ken\'s perfect example.','Ken illustrated my point well. Boston Dynamics might have scripted Atlas\' latest test, but there is still nice progress in the last couple of years. Seems clear to me that soon he\'ll be able to navigate things as they come. Same with Watson. It won\'t take many doubling cycles before he stops making those types of mistakes.\r\n\r\nAnd with AI, robots, automation, whatever you want to call it, the knowledge is transferable. Whereas, often us meat sacks, have to repeat the mistakes of our predecessors to relearn as they did.\r\n\r\nSeems odd to me to look back at the tech improvements in just the past 20 years and not think these areas will be vastly improved upon, too.','2018-11-07 23:48:09'),
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(2563,2558,'2018-11-10 12:32:07','Dave Morriss','Re: You missed one','Hi Fifty,\r\n\r\nOh yes, English is difficult. It\'s rich and interesting (to me anyway) but it\'s a beast as well.\r\n\r\nYes to affect/effect. I thought it was in my list, but it was not.\r\n\r\nBritish vs USA stuff: As I have aged I have tried very hard not to do the finger pointing and criticising of US English. I try to be critical across the board...!\r\n\r\nIn the 1980\'s I went to a conference run by Burroughs (when we had a mainframe at my work) and the speaker (from the US) said the word \"instantiate\". Some British guy interrupted and criticised him, saying it was not a word, only to be shot down with a dictionary reference. He looked a fool I thought, and vowed to myself never to do that!','2018-11-10 12:34:17'),
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(2564,2672,'2018-11-11 22:23:13','Alison Chaiken','particularly informative episode','I\'ve never made much use of \'live\' media except for installation and system rescue, but I found the ideas shared by Klaatu particularly thought-provoking. I have been travelling and wanted to perform some simple task like airline check-in from a lobby computer but hesitated over using Windows of any flavor for anything. It would be fun to at least try to reboot these machines as Linux, but don\'t things like network proxy configuration screw up such attempts?\r\n\r\nIt would also be fun to test-drive Linux on PCs or laptops in computer stores, but don\'t staff wander by and tell the perpetrator to stop? And doesn\'t secure-boot stop such attempts anyway?\r\n\r\nI\'m curious therefore, Klaatu, on what kinds of systems has this approach been successful? Older, pre-secure-boot PCs?','2018-11-11 22:29:48'),
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(2565,2684,'2018-11-15 12:46:43','ClaudioM','LOL!','Ha!! Hilariously short, sweet, and to the point! Thanks, Ken and kids! :-)','2018-11-15 12:51:08'),
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(2566,2683,'2018-11-15 16:02:31','Ken Fallon','Super Dad','Wow.','2018-11-15 16:16:51'),
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(2567,2684,'2018-11-16 09:51:23','pauleb','Great hack, great episode!!','I\'m absolutely going to do this at home!\r\nThanks a lot!','2018-11-16 12:17:35'),
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(2568,2683,'2018-11-18 06:00:40','Clinton Roy','Thank you.','Thank you for being so open with this.','2018-11-18 10:09:25'),
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(2569,2665,'2018-11-21 23:26:38','dodddummy','You\'ve convinced me.','Ahuka,\r\nI have a couple(3?) of the conditions you\'ve described and I found myself being more and more convinced as this episode went on I could make lifestyle changes, too.\r\n\r\nThanks, man.','2018-11-22 13:55:19'),
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(2570,2676,'2018-11-22 19:40:29','Ken Fallon','we\'ll get back to that','That I often face Ahukas shows with trepidation given I know what he\'s likely to say and I\'m not wanting to hear it. The old \"head in the sand trick worked for grandpa so it\'s good enough for me\". But then you listen and the advice is always good and doable. Now I just feel guilt for not doing it.','2018-11-22 20:58:14'),
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(2571,2399,'2018-11-23 13:11:07','dodddummy','There\'s nothing new under the sun.','Found this and, of course, this is NOT a new idea.\r\n\r\nhttps://youtu.be/SlgOsqlInpc?t=794','2018-11-23 13:30:23'),
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(2572,2679,'2018-11-24 17:12:57','clacke','Immediately useful','Very good episode about some functionality I always vaguely knew was there, but never considered using or even looking into.\r\n\r\nLo and behold, within a week after listening to it, I have already made use of my new-found knowledge to parse some predictably-formatted JSON!\r\n\r\nI ran into issues with quoting the expression, and worked around them by assigned the expression to a variable and referring to that variable in the conditional.\r\n\r\nNow I\'m listening to #2669, and I understand exactly why it went wrong.\r\n\r\nFor the sake of readability, I actually think the assignment workaround was the best way to express it.','2018-11-24 17:25:52'),
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(2573,2679,'2018-11-25 19:56:03','Dave Morriss','Thanks clacke!','Glad you found the show(s) useful and are using Bash regular expressions and capture groups.\r\n\r\nParsing JSON with Bash is a challenging task to take on though, I use jq to do this myself - or the JSON module in Perl of course ;-)','2018-11-25 19:58:59'),
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(2574,2665,'2018-11-29 02:48:29','Kevin O\'Brien','It is about making a decision','I\'m glad I could be of help. My purpose in this series is to say that we can take charge of our health rather than be passive victims. Then I can offer some tools to help in that. You just need to make a decision.','2018-11-29 09:45:17'),
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(2575,2693,'2018-11-30 09:07:51','klaatu','Cool game idea, cool intro','This sounds like it would be kind of an amazing game, actually. I hope it happens. If not, it\'s still a neat idea.\r\n\r\nAnd thanks for the taste of Haskell. I\'ve been mildly curious about it for a while, so it\'s nice to hear something substantial about it.','2018-11-30 10:33:25'),
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(2576,2693,'2018-12-01 06:01:53','tuturto','thanks','Thanks, I\'m kind of fond of the idea too. Ideas of course are cheap and actual implementation is the tricky part. But I\'m trying to get at least very minimally working system up and running at somepoint. Main idea is just to explore idea of writing such a game and learn a bit Haskell and Elm on the side.','2018-12-01 10:42:09'),
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(2577,2672,'2018-12-03 02:33:59','Klaatu','Late response better than no response','Sorry, Alison, I only just saw your comment.\r\n\r\nNetwork Proxy configs: I don\'t have trouble with it, but I also have a VPN available to me; maybe that gets around some wonky network setups. I have not had a problem in airports, universities, hotels, conference centers, or really anywhere that I can think of.\r\n\r\nTest-drive Linux in store: I do this as a matter of habit. If I\'m in a store with computers for sale, I usually reboot at least one PC to Linux just to keep tabs on what works out of the box these days. It seems rare for UEFI of display models to be locked down, so I open the UEFI UI, disable Secure Boot, reboot to Linux, test stuff, and then re-enable Secure Boot to avoid what would be vandalism (I have no interest in giving Linux geeks a bad name - \"keep an eye on that one, he\'ll break our display models until corporate sends somebody to fix them\") \r\n\r\nI\'ve only been approached/reprimanded once for doing this. I calmly explained that I was testing Linux, which I require for work, because I was considering a purchase. The salesperson did not stand down, so I calmly rebooted and later sent an email to the store manager telling them that Linux is a real OS that real people in the area use at work, so the sales team ought to be made aware of it. I haven\'t had a problem since in that store (Warehouse Stationary in NZ, for the record). \r\n\r\nOtherwise, no one has ever bothered to approach me about it. I guess if I was nervous about it, I might try to find a sales person and explain what I needed to do, and why, and then ask if I may demonstrate the process, walking them through everything as I did it. Throwing fancy words around, like \"programmer\" and \"software developer\" and \"C++\" might help dazzl le them into submission.\r\n\r\nEither way, it\'s worth a shot.','2018-12-03 10:42:33'),
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(2578,2694,'2018-12-03 15:20:36','Ken Fallon','Use the website','You are Supposed to read the website at the start of the next level.','2018-12-03 15:24:15'),
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(2579,2694,'2018-12-03 21:37:29','NYbill','Huh?','I\'m not sure what you mean here, Ken. Its not a question... if its a statement, I do read the website at the start of the next level.\r\n\r\nBTW, if anyone got up to 27 last time. Well, they changed 26. So, there is a nice extra bit of challenge to that level now too.\r\n\r\nCurrently stumped on 32... for 3 days now. :P\r\n\r\nGood fun!','2018-12-03 21:39:36'),
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(2580,2694,'2018-12-04 05:43:35','Ken Fallon','I took it to be a hacking challange','So I approached it from the point of view that this was a system we needed to access and had to figure out the answer without clues. I don\'t know where I got this idea, but I thought I heard someone explain it like that. \"If you get stuck then go to the website\".\r\n\r\nSo I was stuck on six for a long time as a result. \r\n\r\nNow at 11. The problem now I searched for \"some tool I know I need\" plus \"something I need to answer\". The result was obvious but I now feel like I cheated. So am deciding if I should come up with another solution ?','2018-12-04 08:08:09'),
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(2581,2697,'2018-12-04 12:39:06','ClaudioM','shutdown on BSDs','A nice, succinct episode. One thing to note, though, is that the switch for poweroff on BSD is \"-p\" (lowercase p) which is different than it is for Linux which is \"-P\" (uppercase P). Not sure what it is on illumos-based distributions since I haven\'t used those yet.','2018-12-04 12:42:00'),
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(2582,2694,'2018-12-04 21:12:29','NYbill','Webpage','Ah I see. I always referred to the Over the Wire link I put in above. \r\n\r\nThere really isn\'t any other way to know what is expected of you for the level. Some levels leave you in an empty home dir. Some Levels you need info from the OTW page you\'ll copy/paste in.\r\n\r\nYes, I bet you were having quite a hard time without reading that! \r\n\r\nI know I said, if you get really stuck, there are web sites out there with full bandit solutions on them. But, I don\'t feel reading the OTW web site for the level goal, then researching commands or tools to solve it on your own is cheating. \r\n\r\nHow else did we all learn any of this stuff. Figure out what needs to be done, and how a thing works, then manipulate it! Hacking. ;)','2018-12-04 21:24:30'),
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(2583,2562,'2018-12-05 06:36:23','clacke','This is an episode','But I\'ll answer very quickly here:\r\n\r\n1. Invoice in fiat, cryptocurrency as a medium for transfering value.\r\n\r\n2. Yeah, that\'s why we didn\'t do that. If currency needs to be all of medium for value transfer, store of value, and unit of accounting to be currency, then most raw cryptocurrency simply isn\'t currency.\r\n\r\n3. Hoo yes.','2018-12-05 07:53:09'),
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(2584,2698,'2018-12-05 14:58:29','Mike Ray','Good timing','What a brilliant tool and a great show.\r\n\r\nThis has come at a good time for me as I am deep into a large screen-scraping project which is yielding complex CSV files with many columns.\r\n\r\nLike b-yeezi I frequently get involved with textual data manipulation in all kinds of formats. I did not know about xsv and have often had to guess the ordinal position of specific columns, and have to do all kinds of slicing and dicing operations.\r\n\r\nNot easy at the best of times, and time consuming. All the more so if you can\'t easily guess the column position because you can\'t see.\r\n\r\nSo the timing of this show is great for me. And this is real hacking.','2018-12-05 15:26:57'),
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(2585,2701,'2018-12-10 08:51:49','tuturto','Particularly interesting','I wasn\'t aware of odroid-go until listening to this episode. Thanks for recording it and spreading information. While games are fun (I like gaming a ton), I would imagine coding for this device is where I would have the most fun. For a long time I have been fascinating about idea of taking my programs with me and carrying them around, using them when I want to.','2018-12-10 08:55:07'),
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(2586,2704,'2018-12-15 17:17:59','Ahuka','Excellent show','As usual, Klaatu does an excellent job in presenting software. I particularly enjoyed when he said \"You could do this, but you shouldn\'t.\" This is true in so many situations.','2018-12-15 18:01:41'),
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(2587,1536,'2018-12-16 13:09:39','Richard Harris','Consultant, Licensed technical instructor','On the Heartland Info Web Pages, I\'ve posted:\r\n\r\n\"Radio Shack 150-in-1 Science Fair \r\nElectronic Project Kit\r\n\r\n\"RECOMMENDED PROJECTS, sorted by difficulty...\r\nwith\r\n\"Additional tips...\"\r\n\r\nat: https://www.harris1.net/info/sci_tech_health/RadioShack_150in1kit.htm\r\n\r\nIt\'s my \"Quick Guide to the best of the 150 projects in this kit, with the list organized from most basic to most advanced, of the 69 best projects for people learning electronics.\"\r\n\r\nThis should help electronics beginners and novices, struggling to learn electronics from the poorly organized manual -- which starts with rather advanced topics, and scatters the basics all over the place. \r\n\r\nAs a tech instructor, looking to hand my old kit of to a newbie, thought I\'d take the time to sort it out for him -- and this is the result. \r\n\r\nAt bottom of chart is a lengthy collection of \"tips\" for novice experimenters, whether using this kit, or not. \r\n\r\nComments and (civil) corrections welcome.\r\n\r\n~ RH of harris1.net','2022-02-14 13:25:09'),
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(2588,2698,'2018-12-16 20:24:11','Dave Morriss','This is a great bit of software','Thanks for this.\r\n\r\nI just listened to the show and immediately thought of several applications of xsv in what I do. I have installed it and am learning my way around it. Definitely a great addition to the toolkit.','2018-12-16 20:44:22'),
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(2589,2706,'2018-12-18 17:44:59','Bob','Novell not AS400','It was a Novell server.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/04/12/missing_novell_server_discovered_after/','2018-12-18 17:46:55'),
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(2590,2707,'2018-12-18 22:47:55','b-yeezi','Great show','Thank you for this to steganography. It is a topic that I\'ve heard of and gave it little thought until this show. I\'m interested in what you will come up with for your next episode.','2018-12-18 22:49:49'),
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(2591,2707,'2018-12-19 02:30:17','Klaatu','Great intro','Thanks for this excellent overview. I find steganography fascinating but never thought about the workflow. This episode is a great way to focus on the steps and tools involved.','2018-12-19 07:49:07'),
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(2592,2706,'2018-12-20 16:11:44','Klaatu','Intro music','I love this retro version of the intro music. Really cool episode, too. I was not familiar with AS/400, and I don\'t know much about mainframes, so this was a fascinating overview. Thank you!','2018-12-20 16:13:05'),
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(2593,2705,'2018-12-20 16:48:42','Klaatu','smart','Listening to this episode made me feel really smart, mainly because of all the science-y terms like \"control group\" and \"double blind\". Once I past feeling like I was now an expert in scientific studies, I realised that this topic is actually a broad topic and can even, in many ways, be applied to a lot of things in life, possibly software testing and usability studies. I\'d love to get a job some time where I could just test people\'s reactions to various interface designs, or to arbitrary limitations imposed on software, and so on.\r\n\r\nThanks for this series; I never thought of myself as being interested in health care and science, so it\'s been unexpectedly intriguing.','2018-12-20 16:50:14'),
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(2594,2697,'2018-12-20 17:52:53','Klaatu','another great jwp episode','Thanks for yet another straight-forward and informative episode, jwp. I always wondered about the `halt` thing, since on Slackware I\'d learned (probably from the Slack book) `shudown -h now`\r\n\r\nClaudioM: OpenIndiana uses the original Sun shutdown command (at the time of this writing, at least; I know a lot of CDDL stuff is is systematically getting replaced, but I\'m not sure if \'shutdown\' is on that list), and its options are pretty basic.\r\n\r\nOh heck, I\'ll just go record an episode about it.','2018-12-20 17:57:03'),
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(2595,2701,'2018-12-20 17:57:29','Klaatu','Particularly interesting +1','I\'d heard of odroid, but this has been a great review of one, with lots of useful hands-on information. Thanks for this. Eventually, I assume my Pocket Chip will die, and since the company that created it is no more, I can foresee wanting a replacement. These ultra-portable systems (some Pi-like device with a screen and some method of input) are really really useful on the 20 hour flights from New Zealand to the East Coast of USA that I end up having to make once or twice a year for some tech conf.','2018-12-20 17:59:36'),
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(2596,2698,'2018-12-20 18:12:22','Klaatu','Neato','I don\'t encounter CSV all that often, but this is a great tool to know about. Thanks!','2018-12-20 18:13:19'),
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(2597,2697,'2018-12-20 21:23:09','Klaatu','episode 2725','My Illumos response is episode 2725. Enjoy, and thanks both JWP and ClaudioM for the comparisons.','2018-12-20 21:34:19'),
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(2598,2695,'2018-12-20 22:35:33','Klaatu','Required listening','This ought to be required listening for everyone before they are allowed on the Internet, or out of their front door.','2018-12-20 22:38:31'),
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(2599,2705,'2018-12-21 02:41:42','Ahuka','Follow your bliss','Thanks for the comment, Klaatu. I guess this works because I always pick topics I am interested in, and I suspect that is what makes it interesting to others.','2018-12-21 10:13:31'),
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(2600,2695,'2018-12-21 03:32:52','Kevin O\'Brien','Finding truth','Many years ago I was told by a professor that all really important questions come down to epistemology, i.e., how do we know what we know? I have come to see the truth in that statement. I\'m glad you also see that Klaatu.','2018-12-21 10:13:31'),
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(2601,2710,'2018-12-21 08:07:55','Gustaf','Thank you','Nice one, this will come in handy. Thank you for posting','2018-12-21 10:13:31'),
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(2602,2666,'2018-12-22 03:52:20','Klaatu','shameless self promotion','Great episode on Slackware, thanks.\r\n\r\nI have written a guide on the post-install process here:\r\nhttps://slackermedia.info/handbook/doku.php?id=user\r\n\r\nI should probably go to the Slack wiki and merge it into the official docs, but I\'m not sure what the protocol is for total re-writes of someone else\'s content. Anyway, it\'s available in the Slackermedia handbook, and covers most of the absolute necessary tasks as well as some GUI customisations.','2022-02-14 13:25:09'),
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(2603,2635,'2018-12-22 04:03:21','Klaatu','Best explanation of what a mainframe is','I\'ve asked, I\'ve skimmed wikipedia pages, but until you explained the isolation of the main CPU, with controllers for other tasks, I never understood exactly what a mainframe was. So thank you.\r\n\r\nAlso, thanks for the clear explanation of how to get started with this. I heard about the Open Mainframe project (https://www.openmainframeproject.org) and kinda poked around there, but I think I\'ll give Hercules a go before Open Mainframe\'s Zowe.','2018-12-22 07:56:02'),
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(2604,2661,'2018-12-22 04:48:41','Klaatu','Nice look behind the scenes','This was a fascinating peek behind the scenes. I love hearing how open source musicians produce their music, and I loved the samples of the music at the beginning. Very cool!','2018-12-22 07:56:02'),
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(2605,2378,'2018-12-22 04:52:40','Klaatu','docbook rocks','https://docbook.rocks/\r\nIs a neat site talking about docbook and how great it is.','2018-12-22 07:56:02'),
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(2606,2619,'2018-12-22 07:38:25','Klaatu','can\'t wait to try it','Quilt sounds really neat. I can\'t wait to try it. \r\n\r\nThanks for a great episode!','2018-12-22 07:56:02'),
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(2607,2712,'2018-12-28 05:54:34','Ken Fallon','Did anyone win ?','we need to know.','2018-12-28 10:33:28'),
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(2608,2706,'2018-12-31 04:05:53','Windigo','Certainly piqued my interest','Thanks for the informative episode! I\'ve bumped up against the AS/400s a few times in my life, but never managed to find out what they were all about.\r\n\r\nI feel this was a great intro, and I will be poking around the museum to learn more.','2018-12-31 07:33:57'),
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(2609,2716,'2018-12-31 16:18:04','b-yeezi','Already put to use','Great episode. I have already started using this tip in my Tiny Tiny RSS instance.','2018-12-31 17:22:18'),
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(2610,2712,'2019-01-04 21:22:02','ShortFatBaldGuy','Great episode/series','Solid work klatuu, if you\'re ever in the Cincinnati area, I\'d like to buy you a beer and pick your brain - Scott','2019-01-04 22:07:39'),
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(2611,2719,'2019-01-07 17:03:00','Ken Fallon','Things I didn\'t know','Didn\'t know about Substring manipulation\r\n\r\nAlso found out why the following works\r\n\r\n\r\nfilepath=$(dirname -- \"${source}\")\r\nfilename=$(basename -- \"${source}\")\r\nextension=\"${filename##*.}\"\r\nfilename=\"${filename%.*}\"','2019-01-07 17:08:29'),
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(2612,2712,'2019-01-07 19:16:39','Klaatu','no lucky winners','Nobody emailed me revealing that they found the hidden object. To be fair, there wasn\'t much time, it was around the holidays, and people are busy. I should look at the server logs to see how many people actually downloaded the sample PDF containing the payload.\r\n\r\nI believe that most listeners consume HPR from RSS and never see shownotes (and all of my subtle hints that there was more than meets the eye about this mini-series were only in shownotes).\r\n\r\nAnyway, it was a fun experiment, and interesting data about both steganography and the PDF format.','2019-01-07 19:21:51'),
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(2613,2719,'2019-01-07 19:18:46','Dave Morriss','Substring manipulation','This is a very cool feature which I use a lot!\r\n\r\nI\'d approach your example with a little script, \'pathparse\' which shows you don\'t need \'dirname\' or \'basename\':\r\n\r\n$ cat pathparse\r\n#!/usr/bin/env bash\r\n\r\npath=\"$1\"\r\n\r\ndirectory=\"${path%/*}\"\r\nfilename=\"${path##*/}\"\r\nprefix=\"${filename%.*}\"\r\nsuffix=\"${filename#*.}\"\r\n\r\nprintf \'%-9s: %s\\n\' \\\r\n \'Directory\' \"$directory\" \\\r\n \'Filename\' \"$filename\" \\\r\n \'Prefix\' \"$prefix\" \\\r\n \'Suffix\' \"$suffix\"\r\n\r\n$ ./pathparse /etc/apt/sources.list\r\nDirectory: /etc/apt\r\nFilename : sources.list\r\nPrefix : sources\r\nSuffix : list','2019-01-07 19:21:51'),
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(2614,2712,'2019-01-07 19:20:14','Klaatu','Thanks Scott','Thanks for the comment and offer, Scott. I\'m more a coffee drinker, and rarely in Cincinnati any more, but drinking and talking about tech is pretty much my favourite pastime. So if I\'m in the area I will absolutely broadcast it on the HPR mailing list so I can take you up on your offer!','2019-01-07 19:21:51'),
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(2615,2709,'2019-01-08 11:56:32','dodddummy','In case you are worried Dave will run out of material','https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bash/2019-01/msg00063.html\r\n\r\nBASH 5,0!!!','2022-02-14 13:25:09'),
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(2616,2709,'2019-01-08 20:28:38','Dave Morriss','Bash-5.0','Yes, I just saw that on Mastodon. Thanks for the heads-up.\r\n\r\nOh boy, lots of fun for me, infinite vistas of tedium for my audience ;-)','2019-01-08 20:29:39'),
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(2617,2629,'2019-01-08 22:55:32','dodddummy','The Stanley Parable','Joel H,\r\nI just read your comment and looked at \"The Stanley Parable\". I think this would work just fine in a first person exploratory game. As I\'ve thought it about this and games more, I can\'t think of a game type this wouldn\'t work in, actually.\r\n\r\nFirst person mode would be interesting in the thoughts could switch from initially being in the native language but switching to the new language as progress is made. That\'s sort of the ideal situation I suppose in general. If you can think in the new language I suppose you\'ve won.','2019-01-08 22:57:44'),
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(2618,2668,'2019-01-10 17:21:58','MrX','Re Comment 1 from Michael','Many thanks for the comment much appreciated\r\nVery sorry for taking so long in replying I\'m not very good and checking for new comments probably for the same reason that I didn\'t include the interesting noise from my tuner. Afraid it all boils down to time or lack of it as I would have had to set things up and make a separate recording and I was just keen to get the show finished my apologies, again the same reason for not giving audio examples of the noise blanker. Also thanks for the information on relays having never owned a modern HF radio I assumed they would be silent, thanks for the clarification\r\n\r\nBest wishes MrX','2019-01-10 17:41:19'),
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(2619,2668,'2019-01-10 17:25:03','MrX','Re Comment 2 from lostnbronx','Hi yes indeed wonderful microphone, unfortunately, I\'ve never had the pleasure of using such a mike myself. The picture was actually to show an example of a radio with a moving analogue tuning needle that moves across the front of the radio, the microphone just happened to be in the picture.\r\n\r\nThe AVO meter is indeed a classic and something I have personally used on numerous occasions many years ago, they look like something out of an old horror film and are very heavy, built to last. \r\n\r\nBest wishes MrX','2019-01-10 17:41:19'),
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(2620,2725,'2019-01-11 19:21:40','ClaudioM','Quite a Different Shutdown','A very informative episode. I hadn\'t realized how different the shutdown command functions on illumos-based operating systems is from the BSDs and Linux. You\'ve also inspired me to make an HPR episode on a similar command with the same name in another OS I have to use from time to time.','2019-01-11 19:34:28'),
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(2621,2721,'2019-01-15 11:57:46','Dave Morriss','Very nice show!','Thanks Yannick, I really enjoyed listening to this. Very well done.\r\n\r\nIt was also great to hear Jeroen on the Community News again. For the record the HPR \"muggers\" at OggCamp 2018 that suggested he join us were JWP and myself ;-)\r\n\r\nI caught something a bit like flu just after Christmas - but it can\'t have been flu because I had my flu shot. Anyway, the notFlu, or its aftermath, is still hanging on three weeks later.','2019-01-15 11:59:43'),
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(2622,2721,'2019-01-16 05:23:17','Windigo','Listening through the back catalog','I\'m one of the folks listening through the HPR back catalog (in descending order). Older episodes are often still relevant, and those that are a little \"dated\" are still fascinating from a historical perspective.\r\n\r\nLike Ken mentioned, this is also a fantastic way to flesh out the tags and summaries on older episodes. It only takes a few extra minutes per show!','2019-01-16 08:57:51'),
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(2623,2728,'2019-01-17 08:00:31','Ken Fallon','As a means for telling two stories at once ?','Hi LnB,\r\n\r\nLoved this show as ever. It got me thinking that I enjoyed \"The Usual Suspects\", and \"Fight Club\" as two well executed movies. Both had me going back to watch it again to see how they fooled me. \r\n\r\nI would like to argue that \"The Sixth Sense\" took the premise of the unreliable narrator(s) and did something unique to set it apart from the other two. Namely they produced two entirely different films from the same series of pictures. \r\n\r\nThe first time I saw it I watched a Horror Film starring Bruce Willis, and saw a story about a man who discovers the truth.\r\n\r\nThe second time watching it I saw a Drama starring Haley Joel Osment, and saw a story about a boy struggling to accept he is different, having to deal with difficult situations and learning to trust again.\r\n\r\nAfter listening to your show, I realised that this was only possible because both characters were Unreliable Narrators, one unknowing and the other using it as a tool to help.\r\n\r\nKen.','2019-01-17 10:14:19'),
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(2624,2734,'2019-01-17 18:14:25','Klaatu','Coincidentally...','I\'ve resumed using mashpodder for podcatching just recently.\r\n\r\nThe audio jack on my mobile failed (rending my mobile functionally useless as a podcast listening device), so I dug out an old media player loaded with RockBox, and I use it as my listening device. For one day, I tried loading it manually with podcasts, and then realised that I needed something to manage show downloads for me, and mashpodder is what I turned to. \r\n\r\nI started modifying it so that it would run an arbitrary script (such as a conversion script) but got distracted. Maybe later....','2019-01-17 19:52:22'),
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(2625,2734,'2019-01-20 19:51:41','MrX','Re Coincidentally...','Hi Klaatu, I took some advice from our friend Dave Morris he suggested I might like to use the RSS feed to keep track of comments. I got hold of a simple RSS feeder on the Android play store. It seems to be working out great as I was alerted to your comment. Without the reader, months may have gone by before stumbling across your comments. Mashpodder is ripe for modifying especially since it\'s so well written with loads of good comments. I have plenty of unfinished projects so I can relate to what you are saying.\r\n\r\nAll the best \r\nMrX','2019-01-20 20:03:20'),
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(2626,2731,'2019-01-23 17:26:40','tuturto','amazing memories','I never actually owned BBC, but read about them a lot when I was kid. Especially Elite was touted as the best space game ever and BBC version being superior in every possible way. Thanks for making the episode, it sure resurrected bunch of old memories.','2019-01-23 17:31:48'),
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(2627,2731,'2019-01-23 17:46:27','Dave Morriss','This was a real treat','Great episode. I\'m jealous. So much nostalgia.\r\n\r\nI actually bought a BBC Micro in about 1981(?) having previously owned an Acorn Atom (I think). What\'s more I still have the Beeb, though it\'s mouldered away many years in the attic. I bought the Z80 co-processor, the \"Prestel adaptor\" (modem in a beige box), a dual floppy disk drive and a bunch of other stuff including the RGB monitor. It was my main computer for many years.\r\n\r\nIt\'s been something I have been meaning to do for some time - resurrect these devices. The replacement of all the dead electrolytic capacitors might be more than I can manage, but I\'ll have a go. If not then I know I can buy a properly refurbished one off eBay ;-)\r\n\r\nI hope you\'ll do more shows about your experiences with this magnificent machine.','2019-01-23 17:49:44'),
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(2628,2731,'2019-01-23 21:25:30','Jon Kulp','I love legacy hardware','I LOVED this episode! I like anything about retro equipment, making old stuff work again, using legacy equipment/formats. This was great. My own interest is mainly audio, but it\'s great hearing about any of these old tech products that are still usable or are being refurbished and loved again. Thanks. :)','2019-01-23 21:27:23'),
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(2629,2731,'2019-01-23 23:00:11','timttmy','first contact','Thanks for the show Andrew.\r\nMy first contact with any computer was the BBC in the \"Big\" class (Final year) at primary school. I can vividly remember playing Granny\'s Garden [1] when I was 9 or 10.\r\nThen at secondary school while everyone was messing around with the new windows 3.1 i386 machines I spent _days_ on the only BBC left in the school typing code in from a magazine called quest [2]. The code was some sort of database programme but it never ever worked and so far above my skill set to debug it just sat on my 5 1/4\" floppy destined to stay in my school bag until the end of time.\r\nI actually gasped and swore when you jogged, well set a nuclear bomb off in my memory with the two words \"Star dot\". I had forgotten how simple the commands were.\r\nAnyway please please do a follow up show. I would love to hear more about the BBC and see how much I can remember. \r\n\r\n[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granny%27s_Garden\r\n[2]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quest_(British_magazine)','2019-01-24 07:44:58'),
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(2630,2717,'2019-01-25 09:42:51','rtsn','!','Good episode!','2019-01-25 09:44:12'),
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(2631,2726,'2019-01-25 09:44:48','rtsn','!','Cool, thanks for sharing! Very interesting episode.','2019-01-25 09:49:26'),
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(2632,2731,'2019-01-25 12:13:39','rtsn','c0mment','Thanks for this wonderful episode. The bbc seems like pretty cool machine. more episodes on this please!','2019-01-25 15:29:45'),
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(2633,2731,'2019-01-25 23:22:31','Mike Ray','Jealous','I spent probably most of the first half of the eighties playing Elite on the BBC micro. Or Donkey Kong, or writing code for it.\r\n\r\nLast time I used one, or was it two, was to calculate the position of the Moon and steer a huge VHF antenna array to point at it, late eighties and early nineties. Wasn\'t ideal since the ADC port was only 11 bit, so no great accuracy with the Moon\'s position, could not have pointed Jodrell Bank with sufficient definition.\r\n\r\nI could see back then.\r\n\r\nI am very jealous of all of those classic 8-bit classic games at your fingertips. And all loading fast.\r\n\r\nYou must have been sick when the PSU blew up.\r\n\r\nLast question...where can I find a wife like that?','2019-01-26 11:17:29'),
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(2634,2737,'2019-01-29 02:12:48','Jon Kulp','Tape counter is functioning now','Follow-up: research on the issue indicated that a non-functional tape counter in this machine was about 99% likely to be from a broken belt. The reels are direct-drive but a belt turns the counter. I got a replacement belt from eBay and installed it today, and I\'m happy to report that it works perfectly now.','2019-01-29 07:21:59'),
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(2635,2737,'2019-01-29 12:20:29','Bookewyrmm','ancient media','I just finished listening to the episode, and wow! I love finding and listening to older media. The \"Crown Jewel\" in my collection is an Edison Record. Sadly it came to me broken, but I do have all of the pieces and the cardboard storage cylinder is whole, so even if I do ever find a player, I couldn\'t play it. \r\n\r\nFor those interested, here\'s a link to info on Edison Cylinder records\r\n\r\nhttps://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/history-goldmoulded.php','2022-02-14 13:25:09'),
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(2636,2737,'2019-01-29 15:00:22','Jon Kulp','Victrola episode','Thanks for your comment, Bookewyrmm. It\'s too bad about your Edison disc. If you enjoyed this episode about open reel tape, then you might enjoy one I did a few years ago about my Victrola in episode 1339. \r\n\r\nIncidentally I recently discovered a guy on YouTube who does amazing videos about Legacy audio formats, a user called Techmoan. These are just awesome. I highly recommend subscribing.','2019-01-29 15:02:19'),
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(2637,2737,'2019-01-29 15:42:04','Dave Morriss','Wow! What a beautiful tape deck!','Thanks Jon. This was a wonderful voyage of nostalgia.\r\n\r\nAs a teenager I had a portable Clarion tape deck (https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/gbc_clarion.html?language_id=2) which I\'d bought from my cousin. It got a lot of use and I learnt how to splice tape and make tape loops back then. I\'d record the latest hit records off the radio to share with friends and family. I did some basic repairs on the player, and learnt to solder when the leads and plugs needed fixing. The Clarion died eventually and probably got junked sadly.\r\n\r\nI always wanted - but never acquired - a big reel-to-reel player like a Grundig, Philips, TEAC, or whatever. Great to hear about your adventures in this area!','2019-01-29 15:42:44'),
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(2638,2737,'2019-01-29 16:43:28','Jon Kulp','I want one!','Wow, Dave, I REALLY wish you still had that Clarion tape machine! I love stuff like that. A portable reel-to-reel tape deck is definitely on my wishlist of vintage audio. Incidentally the YouTuber Techmoan did an amazing episode about the tape decks of Mission Impossible, featuring the Craig 212. Thanks for the feedback. :)','2019-01-29 16:50:26'),
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(2639,2707,'2019-02-05 17:16:21','rtsn','!','thanks for a wonderful episode','2019-02-05 17:17:13'),
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(2640,2743,'2019-02-06 08:02:13','tuturto','Pleasure to listen to','This was really fun episode to listen to and it made me kind of want to play some roleplaying game again. The comment about charisma being least useful stat made me think how it depends on the game being played and the group. Some like shooting (or hitting, or magic missiling) everything that moves, while others like politics and intrigue. Probably best to have a chat before game to set expectations what kind of game people are generally looking forward to.','2019-02-06 08:39:29'),
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(2641,2737,'2019-02-06 14:12:27','VulcanRidr','Excellent!','I listened to your RT707 podcast this morning on my way in to work. What a blast from the past...I have the RT909 (https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uPsAAOSworNcRKPc/s-l300.jpg), the 10\" reel version of the same tape deck that you have. I picked mine up in the mid-to-late 80s. Now I am racking my brain to figure out where I can pull it out of storage and set up. I want to go back and listen what I put on some of my tapes...\r\n\r\nComparing traditional music formats, LPs, reel tapes, etc to mp3s and oggs is like comparing \"dead tree\" books to e-books. With books, you have the physical sensation of a paper book...The smell of the book, the feel of flipping pages. Meanwhile, with music, not only do you have the spinning tape reels and the movement of the tonearm, but more than that, analog music has more depth and richness, and is generally a warmer ambience than digital music. But at the same time, I can put several hundred thousand digital tracks onto a device which fits in my shirt pocket, and only need a pair of headphones to partake. \r\n\r\nAnyway, it is gems like this show that make me enjoy HPR. Thanks Jon!\r\n\r\n--vr','2019-02-06 14:21:15'),
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(2642,2741,'2019-02-06 19:36:13','Brian in Ohio','show notes','I listen to hpr on my android phone using antennapod (available at f-droid) and can see the shownotes and the links in the show notes take you to the website. Great application!','2019-02-06 19:58:02'),
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(2643,2737,'2019-02-06 23:35:45','Jon Kulp','the RT-909','Thanks for the comments, VulcanRidr, very glad to hear you enjoyed the episode. I\'ve seen the RT-909 that you mentioned in catalogs and on eBay, and that would be a great tape deck to have. Takes considerably more space than the 707 and probably would not fit in my stereo rack because it would need room above it for those big reels to spin. I\'d love to have one, though! I believe the YouTube Techmoan host has an RT-909 in his collection. If you do pull it out of storage and set it up, I hope you will do a response episode about it. I would love to hear that.','2019-02-07 10:05:40'),
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(2644,2708,'2019-02-07 23:05:08','Steve','Just what I needed','Just wanted to say thank you for this episode. I needed to reduce the size of a PDF today, and I knew right where to come and the necessary command was in the show notes. Worked perfectly.','2019-02-07 23:07:19'),
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(2645,2672,'2019-02-26 06:37:56','clacke','Re: Test-driving Linux in computer stores','Alison, I\'ve been pleasantly surprised here in Hong Kong that if I ask the store clerks, they will generously allow me to boot from my USB stick to see how well Linux runs, no complaints whatsoever.\r\n\r\nAnd that\'s lucky too, because last spring and summer when I was shopping for a new machine, I tried like ten of them before I found one where screen, Wi-Fi and touchpad were working without glitches and the machine didn\'t crash after a few minutes.','2019-02-26 08:01:36'),
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(2646,2754,'2019-02-27 17:47:06','klaatu','this episode','Great episode. The question is how to get the target audience (the people who\'d be fooled by this kind of transaction) to listen to this. I think part of the problem is that people who are fooled by this sort of thing have no interest in learning about it. \r\n\r\nThen again, maybe people-who-can\'t-be-bothered aren\'t the audience.\r\n\r\nEither way, thanks for the walkthrough of the investigation. It\'s great to hear an example of methodical analysis.','2019-02-27 18:26:47'),
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(2647,2706,'2019-02-27 19:02:43','Rob','hpr2706 - episode about AS/400','Hi Jeroen, \r\n\r\nthank you for your talk about AS/400 systems . I was working with those magical machines for about a decade and I must admit it was truely enjoyable experience. Thanks again for bringing back good memories. Cheers. treboR\r\n\r\nP.S. I don\'t know how about others but for me those machines will always be AS/400 no matter what new marketing name IBM would invent for them iSeries, System i, etc... ;-)','2019-02-27 20:06:18'),
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(2648,2759,'2019-02-28 21:21:52','NYbill','Stepping on toes!','Stealing a show I had planned, Jon! \r\n\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/m/winter-to-do-list-fix-this/\r\n\r\nAll right, all right. You beat me to it fair and square. \r\n\r\nBTW, there is contact cleaner that is specifically made for music gear and it does contain a lubricant. Its made by DeoxIT and the line of products is called Fader (Their font choice on \'Fader\" looks awful familiar! \r\n\r\nAlso, I would say your saturation is not working properly, if at all. That thing should give you all the Hair Metal distortion you could ask for. :P\r\n\r\nYou might have a problem with the foot pedal. I had this same issue in the past. You might be stuck in NORM GAIN. And the pedal is not switching into LEAD GAIN (where the Saturation is).\r\nThe problem I used to have is, the 90 degree jack for the foot pedal does not retain/grip the cable in any way. Any tug on the cable can break a solder joint inside. Its something to check out. Its only a couple screws. \r\n\r\nGood luck! And get some hair spray!','2022-02-14 13:25:10'),
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(2649,2759,'2019-03-02 15:14:57','Jon Kulp','Never too much about 80s gear','Haha Sorry, Bill! Please do the show anyway. I think the foot pedal is actually working fine, it\'s just that I didn\'t realize it was switched over to the other channel while I was working on the amp and the foot pedal wasn\'t actually plugged in at the moment. I realized my mistake when I plugged the foot pedal in and stepped on it and suddenly saturation was working because it was on the right channel. \r\n\r\nThanks for the tip on the cleaner / lubricant. I think I will check with my audio engineering faculty guy and see if he\'s got a can sitting around that I can blast some into the pots without having to pay twenty bucks for a can myself. :)','2019-03-02 15:16:44'),
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(2650,2761,'2019-03-04 01:26:28','Mike Ray','Media embedded show notes','NO, NO, NO!\r\n\r\nThis is likely to be an accessibility nightmare and might well render it impossible for blind participants like me to read the notes at all.\r\n\r\nI admit I rarely consult the notes, except for shows with a *strong* hacker twist, like the shows about xsd or Dave\'s bash series of shows.\r\n\r\nAnything which is likely to have links, such as links to github repositories, or fragments of code I might like to copy and paste and fiddle about with.\r\n\r\nI can\'t imagine that other people who refer to show not3es for clicking on links will be helped by embedding text into media files either.\r\n\r\nAnd while on the subject, I have not seen this yet on HPR I think, but when anybody includes the output from cli stuff in show notes, posting screen-shots of console or terminal output also makes it impossible for me to access the text.\r\n\r\nKeep the show notes as separate text please and don\'t embed them into media. If you do, maybe we can have them as both.','2019-03-04 09:00:15'),
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(2651,2762,'2019-03-05 04:52:48','tuturto','oh, wow','This was way deeper episode than what I expected after listening couple more minutes. Really great, albeit sad at the same time (just like life) show.\r\n\r\nReminds me time when I started role-playing games and how I as a dungeon master couldn\'t bring myself to actually get players killed, but had to always come up with a some way to save them. Players had fun, but challenge wasn\'t really there.','2019-03-05 07:57:02'),
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(2652,2749,'2019-03-07 07:02:10','Klaatu','We are stupid','Page 19 has 3 tables (2-1 through 2-3) with a summary of bonus values for race, themes, and class.\r\n\r\nI think two lessons learned:\r\n\r\n0. use the official character sheet when building a character for the first time\r\n1. actually read','2019-03-07 08:28:21'),
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(2653,2708,'2019-03-07 18:49:22','Klaatu','You\'re welcome','I\'m glad this helped, Steve.\r\n\r\nYou\'re not the only one this episode has helped. I\'ve referred back to it at least fortnightly since posting it!','2019-03-07 20:59:01'),
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(2654,2763,'2019-03-09 17:35:27','b-yeezi','Thanks for the help','I used this episode to help me understand why some of my email was ending up in people\'s spam box. I added an SPF record, and now all is well! Thanks.','2019-03-09 18:07:02'),
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(2655,2763,'2019-03-11 09:46:52','pauleb','Great explanation!','It\'s been a while since I set up my email - server with SPF, DKIM and DMARC. Since I\'m about to migrate it to another server this has been a valuable reminder of what SPF is about.\r\nI also think it is much clearer than every guide I read at the time I had to set it up.\r\n\r\nWell written by deepgeek and well read and extended by Klaatu - Thank you two!','2019-03-11 12:07:35'),
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(2656,2764,'2019-03-12 04:26:51','Steve','LessPass','There is an open source project called LessPass that is trying to solve the password management problem in much the same way that you are describing. Passwords are generated in a deterministic and algorithmic way using a master password, some known values related to the site, and some cryptography.\r\n\r\nThere are two challenges that I see with this concept. The first one, that you made reference too, is how do you write an algorithm that will generate a password that will be acceptable to the policies of any site.\r\n\r\nThe second is, how do you deal with sites that insist that you change your password from time to time? In order to do that, you about have to change your algorithm, which means that all your other passwords will be broken.\r\n\r\nIf these two problems can be solved, I\'d be all for this type of password management.','2019-03-12 07:42:33'),
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(2657,2766,'2019-03-12 18:51:48','Joel D','The Letters C and F','Klaatu mentioned he wasn’t sure what the ‘f’ in ‘fdisk’ stood for. I had always been positive it stood for “format” because DOS had an fdisk command and that was pretty much its main use. However, I looked it up just now and turns out I was wrong, it stands for Fixed, as in Fixed Disk Setup Program.\r\n\r\nHe also seemed unsure of the reason why the main hard disk is usually C in Windows machines. PCs would originally boot off the floppy drive, which was always A, and for convenience, a second floppy drive was often added and it was always B. So the hard drives started with C. I don\'t think there\'s any technical reason A and B haven’t been reclaimed, but when I read `A:` or `B:` in a path, I still think “floppy disk”. At any rate, the whole scheme is sad and dumb!','2019-03-12 19:17:39'),
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(2658,2766,'2019-03-13 19:21:21','Klaatu','Thanks for the info Joel','I guess I could have looked up fdisk. Thanks for overlooking my laziness.\r\n\r\nVery enlightening about the C drive! I can respect extreme backward-compatibility, so I don\'t mind that they don\'t reclaim A or B. That said, the scheme is pretty stupid. I\'m surprised it stuck around, but I guess once they\'d made the decision, they just figured it was too late to change. It seems the more I learn about the historical Microsoft, the more I feel like it was started with no prior research, but then again maybe I\'m biased because we live in such an open source world. After all, maybe back in the early 80s you couldn\'t just call up Bell Labs and ask if the way you\'re programming disk detection made sense or not.','2019-03-13 22:14:22'),
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(2659,2766,'2019-03-14 13:12:14','Ahuka','Old drive letters','klaatu, remember that inertia is the most powerful force in the universe.','2019-03-14 13:13:21'),
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(2660,2768,'2019-03-15 02:46:39','Klaatu','Agog and aghast','This is just so cool. The worldbuilding part makes me want to write a script to generate random solar systems with unique planets and constellations. \r\n\r\nI love this project, keep going!','2019-03-15 07:37:18'),
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(2661,2768,'2019-03-15 16:23:35','tuturto','this made my week','Thanks Klaatu, this really made my week. I try to work on the game at least a little bit every day, but sometimes progress feels super-slow. I do like building mechanisms that mimic places and their inhabitants and hopefully eventually allow emergent stories to pop up. Until that day, it\'s slow work of adding one more cog to the machinery.','2019-03-15 16:45:25'),
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(2662,2773,'2019-03-20 08:31:41','tuturto','Good to know','This is sure to come handy. We\'re driving only short distances with car and while it hasn\'t yet damaged the battery, I suspect it will eventually do that. I\'ll have a look at the type of the battery and see if smart charger would be a good idea. Thanks for the information, I wouldn\'t have learned this otherwise I think.','2019-03-20 11:47:12'),
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(2663,2773,'2019-03-20 23:47:36','Nybill','Good Info','Nice job, man. I never knew about the different charging levels for different types of vehicle batteries. I always just bought one that fit, and threw it in. \r\n\r\nI\'ll be more careful next time.','2019-03-21 09:45:28'),
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(2664,2774,'2019-03-21 04:53:06','tuturto','fascinating','I hadn\'t ever heard of CJDNS or Yggdrasil before, so I learned more today (and I\'m not even done with morning coffee). I would love to hear more on what one could do with mesh networks (broad topic, I know).','2019-03-21 09:45:28'),
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(2665,2774,'2019-03-21 18:55:56','Brian-in-Ohio','more shows','Great show. I hope you do more podcasts on any of the topics you mentioned in the show. Don\'t hesitate to give detail!','2019-03-21 19:13:51'),
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(2666,2774,'2019-03-21 19:59:24','norrist','gentoo','I have not used Gentoo on well over 10 years. Could you do a show about why you are using Gentoo and how it compares to debian/ubuntu/fedora/...?\r\n\r\nYou expressed some concern about your microphone, but there was no problem with your audio. Loud and Clear.','2019-03-21 20:38:25'),
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(2667,2774,'2019-03-25 01:10:45','Gavtres','IPv6 end to end encryption','Interesting. I am right now learning how to use Wireguard for end-to-end encryption. Wondering how it works in IPv6. Different approach but similar goal.','2019-03-25 08:56:36'),
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(2668,2776,'2019-03-25 13:17:25','operat0r','fun stuff','long time listener almost first time comment.\r\n\r\nI wanted to say I\'ve always enjoyed your podcast. I don\'t read books or play d&d but I do watch a fair amount of TV and movies.\r\n\r\nYou can hear the amount of passion and what you\'re explaining and I personally feel almost smarter when I can go back and understand why a story I remember was great or horrible!','2019-03-25 13:33:55'),
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(2669,2778,'2019-03-28 19:23:07','Beeza','Intuitiveness Of Haskell','I\'ve been writing software for over 30 years but I find the syntax of Haskell anything but intuitive - in fact less so than any other programming language I have looked at. Thanks to your excellent show notes I can make sense of it but I have to say I would not like to have to develop a project using this language.\r\n\r\nObviously I am missing the point as nobody would design a language with the intention of its being difficult to use. Perhaps you could produce another episode addressing the question \"Why Haskell?\"\r\n\r\nAn excellent episode for all that.....Thanks.','2019-03-28 19:42:32'),
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(2670,2777,'2019-03-29 00:41:09','Beeza','Computer Requirements Specification','Hi Knightwise\r\n\r\nWhenever we are in the market for a new computer I think we inevitably want to get as close to the latest technology as our budget will afford. However, I think that can lead to a subconscious over-specification of our requirements as a way of justifying the purchase.\r\n\r\nA few years ago I had selected a very nice Sony laptop that I convinced myself was exactly what I needed to support my work. Unfortunately an unforeseen breakdown of my car meant I had to spend roughly half of my budget to get it fixed and back on the road.\r\n\r\nI still needed a new laptop but the Sony was now out of the question. I revisited my requirements and realised that many of my \"must haves\" were really \"would like to haves\". If it took a minute or two longer to rip a DVD did it really matter? If it took an extra few seconds to open a very large image-laden document was that really the end of the world?\r\n\r\nBy adopting this approach I found I was able to purchase a Dell rather than a Sony with what was left of my budget and its few relative shortcomings were almost immediately forgotten.','2019-03-29 08:11:42'),
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(2671,2778,'2019-03-29 03:54:52','tuturto','thanks and great idea','Thank you for the comments and episode idea. Haskell certainly is drastically different language compared to many others and learning curve can be steep. Sometimes it feels like I\'m reading a math paper when I want to check for some feature or learn a new thing.\r\n\r\nI\'ll make a note and record an episode \"Why Haskell\" at somepoint in close future. There\'s quite many Haskell episodes in the queue and I don\'t want Hacker Public Radio turn to Haskell Public Radio, so it might take a month or two.','2019-03-29 08:11:42'),
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(2672,2779,'2019-03-31 12:57:10','Hipstre','Enjoyed it, sounded great','Thanks for the podcast. I learned a lot. These protocols are fascinating, because to the end user, a few bytes here or there seem to be insignificant. But across the entire network, a few bytes here or there can add up to millions of dollars.\r\n\r\nOh, and the audio is great.','2019-03-31 14:18:54'),
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(2673,2774,'2019-04-01 07:15:44','clacke','Yggdrasil pronunciation','As a Scandinavian, I can say that your pronunciation of Yggdrasil is entirely accurate, and if anyone doubts it, they can hear Hugo Weaving pronounce it in much the same way in \"Captain America: The First Avenger\", which by coincidence I saw only a few days later.','2019-04-01 07:30:36'),
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(2674,2739,'2019-04-01 10:45:25','clacke','local','More on what local variables are and how they work in episode https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2807 .','2022-02-14 13:25:10'),
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(2675,2779,'2019-04-01 10:48:48','clacke','audio quality','Take it from someone who records shows on their mobile phone: Your audio quality is great. :-)','2019-04-01 11:16:19'),
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(2676,2784,'2019-04-04 07:54:17','tuturto','music to ears','Music to ears, literally. That disklavier must be really high tech as it can replicate playing so well. And watching the video of disklavier playing was really nice bonus. This reminded me of time when as a wee lad I made a trip to museum of mechanical music and they had completely mechanical piano that could play different dynamics, flourishes and what not.','2019-04-04 08:19:11'),
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(2677,2784,'2019-04-04 09:15:34','Jan','Translations','Hello folks,\r\n\r\nDiskette is the German word for floppy disk.\r\n\r\nKlavier is the German word for piano.\r\n\r\nTastatur is the German word for keyboard (at least in terms of computers).\r\n\r\nA pianos keyboard would be called Klaviatur.\r\n\r\nSo Disklavier can be split into Diskette and Klavier.\r\n\r\n\r\nThanks for the fine show :-)','2019-04-04 09:16:59'),
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(2678,2783,'2019-04-04 10:08:59','Bubba','Shutdown.exe command','Thanks for the insight. There\'s a scheduled power outage at work next month, and with this I can make sure everybody\'s workstation is shut down properly without running around and looking at power lights.','2019-04-04 10:22:55'),
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(2679,2784,'2019-04-04 11:15:46','Jon Kulp','Ok but it wasn\'t the \"Well-Tempered Piano\"','But remember, in 1722 Bach wrote Das Wohltemperierte Klavier, and at the time the \"piano\" as an instrument did not exist. It had to mean either keyboard or harphsichord or clavichord. Keyboard is most generic.','2019-04-04 11:35:20'),
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(2680,2784,'2019-04-05 14:08:48','Gavtres','So cool!','I’m not by far music “literate” but the technology in this is so mesmerezing. I’m wondering it the tech exists for other types of instruments, i.e. wind, percussion.','2019-04-05 14:20:55'),
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(2681,2784,'2019-04-05 21:00:50','Dave Morriss','What a wonderful device!','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nI loved this! It\'s a magnificent instrument. I never knew there was anything quite so sophisticated.\r\n\r\nI watched the \'Music Machine Mondays\' on the Wintergarten Youtube channel a couple of years ago. They visited the Speelklok Museum in Utrecht and looked at the marvels there (playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLLYkE3G1HEBO1slIc1RRfcfSsGyv2oMu) but this Disklavier is a significant evolution of these machines.\r\n\r\nListening to your show I was reminded of a thing I liked to listen to when I was a kid: \'Sparky\'s Magic Piano\' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sparky%27s_Magic_Piano). It was often on the radio on Saturdays on a children\'s music programme. This was probably in the 1950\'s.\r\n\r\nI was slightly puzzled by the pronunciation of \"Disklavier\", thinking it should be pronounced the French way. A bit of Googling proved me wrong - and you right of course! In my defence I used to live in an area of rural England with many villages named after Norman French families which were pronounced strangely (to my ears). My favourite was Little Hautbois, an easy cycle ride away, called by the locals \'Hobbis\'! (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Hautbois)','2019-04-05 21:02:12'),
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(2682,2784,'2019-04-06 05:24:14','Guy','How far away are you?','You said you could listen over the internet no mater how many 100s of thousands of miles away you are. What moon/planet would that be? :)\r\n\r\nSorry, I could not resist.\r\n\r\nIt was an interesting show, thanks.','2019-04-06 10:56:42'),
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(2683,2784,'2019-04-06 13:40:13','Jon Kulp','\"or\" not \"of\"','Whoops I thought I said hundreds or thousands, not hundreds *of* thousands. ^_^','2019-04-06 13:46:48'),
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(2684,2783,'2019-04-06 14:12:22','ClaudioM','Also Useful with PsExec from Sysinternals Suite','Glad you found it useful. While you can use it alone, it\'s also useful with tools like PsExec from the Sysinternals suite. I might do an episode about that particular command as well. That suite has so many tools but PsExec is the one I use the most.\r\n\r\nhttps://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/\r\n\r\nYou could probably create a batch file or Powershell script to go through a list of hostnames and have them reboot/shutdown remotely.','2019-04-06 14:18:38'),
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(2685,2787,'2019-04-10 05:48:31','tuturto','looking for more','Great start for the series! I love learning how people are learning new skills like programming languages.','2019-04-10 07:10:11'),
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(2686,2789,'2019-04-11 04:39:04','tuturto','what about non-fictional stories','I love listening to this series and started wondering, how applicable and/or easy would it to adapt these topics in non-fictional story that isn\'t a story at all? If there\'s a book that teaches readers about programming, can some of these topics be still relevant? Could a study book build towards some climatic revelation that is hinted more and more as it comes closer and then revealed in all its glory?','2019-04-11 08:43:31'),
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(2687,2784,'2019-04-14 03:23:34','Windigo','Library of Congress','First of all, this has been one of my favorite shows of all time. What a fascinating musical instrument, not to mention a cool piece of technology!\r\n\r\nBut then you drop this in nonchalantly:\r\n\r\n\"I was working at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, one Summer...\"\r\n\r\nDude, it\'s possible that you\'ve covered this elsewhere, but I\'d listen to a whole show about how that happened. It\'s always great to hear from you!','2019-04-14 09:24:34'),
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(2688,2784,'2019-04-15 21:15:28','Jon Kulp','A great summer job','Hi Windigo, thanks for the comment. Yes, I did work at the Library of Congress in the summer of 1993 as a \"Junior Fellow,\" a paid internship that was quite prestigious. I don\'t know if they still have this or not. It was an amazing gig for a musicology nerd to get to work in the Music Division helping to process the recently acquired archives of Aaron Copland. Maybe this *is* worth an episode of its own!','2019-04-15 21:19:57'),
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(2689,2784,'2019-04-18 12:18:30','Jon Kulp','Older near-perfect player pianos','Dave, sorry it took me so long to respond to your very thoughtful comment. I appreciate the link to the self-playing instruments video podcast. There are some really good ones in there. I\'m especially impressed by the Self Playing Steinway Duo-Art Piano - recorded by Sergei Prokofiev. That one is nearly as faithful to the actual playback as the Yamaha Disklavier, but is limited by the length of the paper that is recorded on. It\'s an analog equivalent, incredibly accurate in its reproduction. There were earlier ones, too. That whole phenomenon would merit an entire series but I don\'t know that much about it haha!','2019-04-18 12:26:00'),
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(2690,2793,'2019-04-22 12:09:22','Dave Morriss','I really enjoyed this!','Thanks clacke, I enjoyed this a lot. Nice to be on the receiving end of the Bash info for a change ;-)\r\n\r\nCommand substitution:\r\nIt\'s my understanding that the newer $() form is an improvement on the older `` form largely because the substitutions can be nested. At least, when I found it years ago I was excited to be able to nest them! I assume it\'s nestable because the new form is easier to parse.\r\n\r\ncoproc:\r\nThis seems cool, though a little involved. I\'d looked briefly but hadn\'t really thought about the feature. Thanks for covering it.\r\n\r\nSince b-yeezi and I have awoken the Awk series from its hibernation recently, I\'m going to cover redirection and Awk\'s coprocess feature as well. Episode 15 is almost ready to be recorded and uploaded.','2019-04-22 12:10:14'),
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(2691,2798,'2019-04-24 08:28:23','tuturto','Yarrr, record me episodes','Now that mandatory pirate speak has been done, I can comment. There\'s market for both kinds of podcasts, grassroots ones and more slick and commercial ones. Latter ones won\'t disappear as long as there\'s money to be made, so it\'s our task to keep the more grassroots style alive.','2019-04-24 11:07:09'),
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(2692,2457,'2019-04-25 11:42:03','Bart','aren\'t you forgetting a hub?','you have the cable and case, but you need a USB-C hub / dock to connect your old usb stuff, you can get them at various websites:\r\nhttps://www.usb-c-adapters.nl','2019-04-25 11:46:00'),
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(2693,2796,'2019-04-25 11:48:37','cogoman','Credit card security','Though I hate the Capitol Onr commercials, they have something new and notable. Their ENO product is a credit card that gives you a new credit card reference number for each vendor you buy from, so if your credit gets stolen, you only lose the one reference number, and all the other bills you pay with your credit card are unaffected. On top of that, you know which vendor compromised your credit card.','2019-04-25 11:49:52'),
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(2694,2798,'2019-04-27 21:17:22','Dave Morriss','Memories of early podcasts and pirate radio','Hi Knightwise,\r\n\r\nInteresting show. I started listening to podcasts in 2005 or thereabouts. I\'d just bought our first family PC (Windows, yuk!), signed up to my first ISP, and had started looking for stuff to listen to. I bought my first MP3 player that year, an iRiver iFP-899, and was using Juice or similar as my podcatcher.\r\n\r\nYes, I listened to the Daily Sourcecode and to Dave Winer (originator of RSS). Some great times!\r\n\r\nI also remember Pirate Radio from the 1960\'s. I was at school in Norfolk, in the east of England, and we all listened to Radio Caroline (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Caroline) and Radio London (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonderful_Radio_London) from ships off the east coast. I\'d listen to Veronica at times, but not a lot since it was in Dutch and the signal wasn\'t as good as I recall. Also good times though!\r\n\r\nThanks for the memories ;-)','2019-04-27 21:28:46'),
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(2695,2798,'2019-04-29 16:39:28','DudeNamedBen','Da Podfather, Adam Curry','This is a great rant, Knightwise, but you don\'t spend any time talking about what Adam has been up to lately, which is EXACTLY the kind of podcast you are encouraging all of us to create and explore. From your handle, I assumed you were also a Knight of the No Agenda Roundtable, but you failed to even mention Adam\'s twice a week podcast done with the cranky geek himself John C. Dvorak. You need to hit more people in the mouth about the No Agenda Show (https://dvorak.org/na) Noagendashow.com\r\n\r\nConsider yourself clobbered, dude!','2022-02-14 13:25:10'),
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(2696,2793,'2019-05-04 11:20:57','clacke','Re: backquotes vs dollar-paren','Yes, that\'s why the dollar-paren was introduced. Backquotes can be nested too, but that requires escaping them with backslashes and we don\'t want to go there if we can avoid it.\r\n\r\nApart from the nesting thing, I find dollar-paren easier to read, especially when enclosed in double-quotes, as it usually is.\r\n\r\nI thought that one difference between the two is that dollar-paren trims any trailing newlines, but it turns out I was wrong -- they both do that, so the difference is purely about quoting and readability.','2019-05-04 12:13:24'),
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(2697,2798,'2019-05-07 02:58:21','Klaatu','This is one of those episodes...','This is the kind of episode I\'d love to have played on NPR or some de facto talk radio station. On the one hand, it\'s \"preaching to the choir\" here on HPR, but then again, the topic is actually bigger than just podcasting. Where have all the blogs gone? the little indie websites and fansites? The Internet in general is a lot more cookie-cutter now than I think it was ever meant to be. As Dave Morriss says in an earlier comment, it\'s up to us to keep grassroots alive.','2019-05-07 07:16:02'),
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(2698,2806,'2019-05-09 03:59:48','clacke','Yggdrasil and Hollywood','I didn\'t mention Hugo Weaving because a superhero movie is a credible source for accuracy, but for reference because he happened to be accurate. :-)','2019-05-09 07:16:17'),
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(2699,2793,'2019-05-09 04:17:22','clacke','Re: awk coprocesses','I heard your comment again on the Community News and discovered that you were talking about awk coprocesses also, not just backticks. :-)\r\n\r\nI didn\'t know about them! Looking forward to the episode.\r\n\r\nFor anyone wanting to read ahead of the class, the documentation page is here:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Two_002dway-I_002fO.html','2019-05-09 07:16:17'),
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(2700,2793,'2019-05-09 08:57:35','Dave Morriss','Regarding awk coprocesses','Hi clacke,\r\n\r\nYes, thanks for the link. I thought \"I put that link in my notes\", went and looked and found I\'d messed it up, so I just fixed it :-)\r\n\r\nThe show is number 15 in the series and is now on the site as https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2824','2019-05-09 09:01:39'),
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(2701,2806,'2019-05-09 13:52:59','clacke','HKOSCON2019','I am aware of the conference, but frankly I haven\'t seen anything in the schedule that would draw me there. It\'s a mix of corporate promotion, blockchain and random student projects ... nothing about languages or development frameworks or services, which is what interests me the most. I don\'t feel a free software pulse there, no work toward building a Hong Kong free software community.','2019-05-09 13:57:55'),
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(2702,2809,'2019-05-09 15:05:58','norrist','The show _was_ fun','This was a great episode. Lots of listeners including myself are interested in the legal aspects of hacking. Thanks for the deep dive.\r\n\r\nOne of my _other_ favorite podcasts is related to this episode - https://faif.us/','2022-02-14 13:25:11'),
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(2703,2813,'2019-05-15 06:44:53','Yannick','Should we dump Windows?\n','Hi Knightwise. While for the most part I agree with your arguments about using cross platform applications, I think the title of this comment is as valid as the title of your episode : I can run Audacity on my linux desktop, I can run firefox and freemind and Visual Studio Code. So, my question is, should we dump Windows ?\r\nAnd the answer is obviously \"no\", because both our questions are flawed. Should __I__ dump Windows ? Should __you__ dump linux desktop ? Now those are valid questions. I have personally made the choice to ban Windows from my house, because I can do everything __I__ need on a linux desktop. You said that you can\'t write documents or make presentation on Linux and that is a perfectly valid reason for __you__ to dump the linux desktop. But as a general rule, no, __we__ should not dump any desktop, be it macOS, Windows, Linux, or any of the exotic ones. As you said in this episode, it\'s all about choice.\r\n\r\nAlso, you mentioned OpenOffice in this episode. I really hope you meant LibreOffice. Because OpenOffice... well... need I say more ? By the way, LibreOffice runs on windows, mac, linux and android. Another great example of cross platform software.\r\n\r\nAnyway, thanks for sharing your thoughts, and even though I don\'t agree with all of them, I appreciated your point of view.\r\n','2019-05-18 07:42:42'),
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(2704,2813,'2019-05-15 07:19:30','Hipstre','Do We Need Linux?','There is a lot to agree on here. Thank you for the podcast! I certainly agree that the distro-obsessiveness is absurd, and there should be more of a focus on applications. And there is so much overlap and duplicated effort in every area of software in the Open Source world.\r\n\r\nI tend to think that Microsoft\'s recent dalliance with \"openness\" is just a case of Embrace, Extend, Exterminate. Essentially, an attempt to get Computer Science students and Programmers to think of the Command Line, and Linux as an esoteric extension of Windows. But who knows what they are thinking.','2019-05-15 07:45:53'),
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(2705,2809,'2019-05-16 02:35:26','Joel D','re: norrist','Thanks for the feedback and the podcast recommendation! I’ll definitely be adding it to my queue.','2019-05-16 07:45:22'),
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(2706,2813,'2019-05-16 17:32:43','DV','Response to knightwise','Knightwise, I respect your knownledge in computers. But I disagree on one point. You said something like, when you need to get things done, only windows and Mac can do it. Maybe so for you, butI can do many things in Linux at least for my needs. I\'ve been using Linux for 21 years.','2019-05-16 17:53:08'),
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(2707,2813,'2019-05-17 10:45:17','DeepGeek','Desktop is Dead','Love this cast and your own personal podcast off this network! \r\n\r\nThat being said, I wanted to say something again that I said in one of my podcasts, and that is that the desktop is dead. Not dead in the sense of no longer being developed, but the whole concept of the desktop is outmoded. For most people, they\'re day-to-day is their personal tablet and/or smartphone. I know many people who no longer would want a desktop or laptop. For me, my companies computer techs have such a bad system setup that most of the rank and file will use any phone app they can get on they\'re hands on in order to avoid using the shard desktop machines our company provides. \r\n\r\nI love my personal desktop environment, and the lack of customization for windows and mac keeps me on linux. Every time I consider going back to windows I eventually end up wistfully checking the status of things like BB4Win and searching for alternative gui shells. If you care about your personal computing environment, you need linux. It\'s like this, in America a car enthusiast would probably want to be in California because California has a \"car culture.\" If you want your environment to respond to what you think it should be for you, you have to do linux.\r\n\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2019-05-17 12:34:17'),
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(2708,2813,'2019-05-17 12:32:17','Snapdeus','Linux desktop','The Linux desktop gives up and coming sysadmins a playground to learn Linux - which they will need to know for server administration.','2019-05-17 12:34:17'),
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(2709,2814,'2019-05-17 14:29:33','ClaudioM','Hello, Fellow Puffy Disciple!','Pretty good episode on the speculative execution stuff that Intel and others are dealing with. And don\'t feel alone, I also run OpenBSD as of late! Been dabbling with the BSDs since 3 years ago and, of all of them, OpenBSD is closest to my heart. I\'m running OpenBSD-current on an old Toshiba Portege M400 convertible tablet PC as well as on a ThinkPad x230 at work. Yeah, certain things like wireless aren\'t up to par yet as they are on Linux or even FreeBSD (which I also run on a laptop at work), but it is a great OS with great security and support. Another HPR contributor by the name of Sigflup also runs OpenBSD, and to be honest, her use of it was what piqued my curiosity to the OS. So, rest assured, you\'re in good company as an OpenBSD user on HPR. ;-)','2019-05-17 16:39:29'),
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(2710,2504,'2019-05-23 07:07:41','Ken Fallon','This needs to be a video','Can someone please step forward and do a video of this with this show as the audio track.\r\n\r\nThis link has also been recommended by a colleague https://learngitbranching.js.org/','2019-05-23 09:35:33'),
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(2711,2794,'2019-05-26 17:53:35','Klaatu','Great interview','This was the most informative \"origin story\" story of a distribution I\'ve ever heard. The little details (like building the initial distro in droplets on Digital Ocean, based on a $10 voucher) are fascinating, and provide real insight into how some of these cool \"little\" projects actually happen. Thank you for this, Yannick-the-French-guy-from-Switzerland!','2019-05-26 18:07:16'),
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(2712,2827,'2019-05-30 03:32:04','Christopher M. Hobbs','event cancellation','Sadly, this event was cancelled before the show aired. There was serious flooding in the area. Luckily everybody is safe.','2019-05-30 07:31:50'),
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(2713,2827,'2019-06-04 07:06:59','tuturto','sorry to hear about cancellation','Sorry to hear that the event got cancelled, it sounded really exciting. When you in the beginning were talking about capture the flag, I was under impression that it would be the kid\'s game, where you\'re trying to steal flag from opposing team. Only after you started talking about lockpicks and hacking it dawned to me what kind of capture the flag you\'re talking about here. Super interesting episode, I hope you can eventually make one about actual event (different one than cancelled of course).','2019-06-04 07:54:38'),
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(2714,2829,'2019-06-06 15:14:26','Joel D','Fair Use','Ken makes a key point when he says “While the host may be correct, if they are not, then it is me and not the host that will be held responsible for posting it. I do not want that responsibility.”\r\n\r\nMy two questions are, 1) What exactly is the nature of the two remaining clips whose inclusion is problematic? and 2) what would “being held responsible” mean in practical terms?\r\n\r\nOn the first point, how long are the clips and what are they of? Music? Broadcast footage? Do the clips comprise the entire original work or do they amount to a minor quotation?\r\n\r\nIn the US, Fair Use is an actual legal limitation of creators\' rights under copyright law. The US also has the DMCA, which effectively allows providers to host anything, and if a copyright holder has a problem with their stuff being included somewhere they can file a takedown notice and the provider handles it by simply removing the content in question. But this is not the case in other countries, particularly the EU where there has been a lot of, shall we say, new development in this area recently.\r\n\r\nIf the answer to (1) is \"the two clips are actually entire Beatles songs\"…then there isn’t really a legal defense no matter what jurisdiction we\'re talking about.\r\n\r\nBut even if the answer to (1) is \"They are fifteen-second excerpts from an hour-long lecture given at a public university\", …If the answer to (2) is \"we don\'t/can\'t know so we are acting out of an abundance of caution\" I can respect that.','2019-06-06 15:17:30'),
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(2715,2807,'2019-06-06 21:02:23','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this','I would have commented on the Community News show but couldn\'t make it due to my audio being messed up!\r\n\r\nI really appreciated this episode because it made me realise I was a bit unclear about the issues.\r\n\r\nThe first language I learnt was Algol 60 (around 1970), and later used Pascal a lot. The Algol course was as a Biology undergraduate where they were trying to make us appreciate how we could use computers in our subject. (This was way before Bioinformatics, so we were mainly writing statistical stuff and learning how to plot results).\r\n\r\nAnyway, these languages exposed me to lexical scoping, as you mentioned, and I guess I haven\'t really reflected on the nuances of dynamic scoping since then.\r\n\r\nSo, thanks for the eye-opener ;-)','2019-06-06 21:03:59'),
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(2716,2829,'2019-06-07 11:32:43','Ken Fallon','We don\'t know','In answer to \'1)\' we don\'t know the nature, nor should we. This is HPR and any host can post whatever they wish without us checking it. If they don\'t tell us it contains copyrighted material we would never know.\r\n2) I don\'t know but I do know I don\'t want to find out.','2019-06-07 11:41:53'),
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(2717,2830,'2019-06-10 11:40:40','folky','plumble is better than I thought.','Who would have thought that plumble should give my voice in such a good quality - not to forget over 4G in a train going more than 180 km/h if I remember right. Next time I should record a show live on my Nexus 6 over plumble in the train instead of my room with the fan right above my head ;-)','2019-06-10 12:32:00'),
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(2718,2830,'2019-06-10 11:45:00','folky','More %','The command in the shownotes is missing a %-sign. It should end with %S%Z_%A','2019-06-10 12:32:00'),
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(2719,2830,'2019-06-10 12:38:04','Dave Morriss','Missing \'%\' in date command','Hi folky,\r\n\r\nThanks for the correction. I have made the change to the notes.\r\n\r\nDave','2019-06-10 12:41:14'),
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(2720,2831,'2019-06-10 14:22:48','b-yeezi','Just what I was looking for\n','I had tried NagiosPi and came to the same conclusion as Robbie. This looks like it will be a great alternative. I will definitely be contributing and recommending this software. Thanks to Robbie for the great project and to Yannick for the fantastic episode.','2019-06-13 07:18:23'),
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(2721,2832,'2019-06-11 21:49:10','NYbill','Welcome!','Welcome aboard, man. Part of the crew now. ;)','2019-06-11 21:50:55'),
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(2722,2833,'2019-06-14 19:41:40','Ahuka','Great show!','I really enjoyed this interview. Impostor syndrome is something I think we all deal with at some time or other, and he had good things ot say on the subject. Please keep interviewing interesting people like this.','2019-06-14 19:55:31'),
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(2723,2837,'2019-06-18 15:01:43','norrist','I like this kind of episode.','I like the episodes where the host wanders through a few short topics. It reminds be of the old Dave Yates Lottalinuxlinks podcasts.','2019-06-18 15:11:55'),
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(2724,2839,'2019-06-20 01:02:44','Mike Ray','Accessibility','Another Linux distro reviewing podcast in which the word accessibility was uttered exactly zero times.\r\n\r\nTwo distros reviewed, Linux Mint Debian Edition and Solus, if that is how it is spelt.\r\n\r\nThis podcast was 39 minutes (approx) in length, so assuming each distro had an equal share of time, then how much impact would be made by spending thirty seconds for each talking about accessibility?\r\n\r\nI want to know 2 things always:\r\n\r\n1. Is the installer accessible, whcih means can a blind person like me, not visually impaired, BLIND, install it without sighted help. Is there a hot key which starts the Orca GUI screen reader, or speakup if it is a text-based installer.\r\n\r\n2. If I chose speech for the install, assuming number 1 is true, then when I reboot will it come up speaking.\r\n\r\nNote that I will not accept any Linux distro which I cannot install alone. None of you would entertain any distro for which you had to run to a blind person for help installing.\r\n\r\nPlease, spend some time adding accessibility to your headings, otherwise this podcast is worse than useless to me and people like me','2019-06-20 09:18:45'),
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(2725,2839,'2019-06-20 18:52:22','Bob','reply to Mike','I also listened to the podcast and not once did they mention the distro support for non Latin character sets ? Given the amount of people outside the English speaking world, surely they could have took some time to check Chinese support, and Arabic, and Russian, and Greek, etc. !\r\n\r\nThey made no bones about the fact that they are reviewing the distros from their point of view only. Moss mentions using some proprietary office suite that I\'m sure the majority of HPR listeners are not using.\r\n\r\nBut are these gentlemen even the best people to include accessibility in their reviews? I don\'t think either of them have a need of, or have any experience using accessibility tools. Would we even be able to trust their assessment given that their inability to use them could simply be down to not knowing which key to use to enable support. Would they even know to check that the speech synthesizer is legible when sped up ?\r\n\r\nI would suggest that would be better done by someone who \"will not accept any Linux distro which I cannot install alone.\"\r\n\r\nSo why don\'t you contact the lads and ask them if they would be interested in having you join the show to review a distro entirely from an accessibility point of view.\r\n\r\nIf they are not I\'m sure that there would be an audience here on HPR that would love to hear it.','2019-06-20 20:37:32'),
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(2726,2839,'2019-06-20 20:49:21','Mike Ray','Accessibility and non-English character sets','I don\'t think stuff about non-English character sets is very relevant here, since internationalization is part of the standard Linux base and available in all distros. Perhaps whether language can be selected at install time is relevant, but since Tony, I think, mentioned that UK is Ukraine and not GB, or was that another podcast, these installers are both likely to include localization.\r\n\r\nI can\'t commit to joining anybody for a podcast, but I could offer a goodly amount of guidance as to what we, meaning blind people, need to know.\r\n\r\nOf course VI is just one aspect of accessibility. Consider also people with limited or impaired fine motor control, or missing hands etc.\r\n\r\nAt the very least, I want to know one thing immediately with every distro...can I install it alone, IOW with no help from a light-slave. If the answer is no, not interested.\r\n\r\nWindows 10 can now be installed by me, thanks to Narrator now being an excellent screen reader. But then accessibility on Windows leaves Linux dead. Just one of the ways in which Windows, IOS, and Mac OS are all superior','2019-06-20 20:57:00'),
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(2727,2839,'2019-06-21 14:25:31','Tony Hughes','Responce to Mike and Bob','Mike, you make a very valid point and we will bare accessibility issues in mind for future episodes, unfortunately not in time for this month as we had recorded on the Wednesday before HPR aired our first episode.\r\n\r\nWhile I have not had much experience in installing using voice guided installer it is worth looking at for any new reviews in the future.\r\n\r\nBob, as Mike says most modern distributions have very good support for other languages and in Episode 3 when talking about PCLinuxOS I mention the fact that the community forums have an international section which has a number of the most common languages covered, although I did not mention the number of languages supported at install, again worth the few seconds it would take to mention this at the install stage of the review. \r\n\r\nIt is this kind of feedback that is valuable, as a new podcast we are still in our infancy and learning what the community would find useful in this kind of show. \r\n\r\nThanks again for the Feedback\r\n\r\nTony Hughes\r\nDistrohoppers Digest','2019-06-21 14:37:46'),
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(2728,2839,'2019-06-23 19:32:06','Bob','I wasn\'t serious','Hi Tony,\r\n\r\nI wasn\'t serious about trying all the languages. I was trying to highlight to Mike that it is impossible to cover every aspect of a distro and all you can cover is your own area of expertise. \r\n\r\nBob','2019-06-23 19:53:11'),
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(2729,2839,'2019-06-25 07:37:21','Mike Ray','Accessibility','I understand that not every aspect of Linux distro review can be covered. But accessibility is pretty fundamental, and all the time podcasts and developers ignore it, it will never get any better.\r\n\r\nAs I suggested, the podcast I heard was 39 minutes long, and reviewed 2 distros. So that is approx 19 minutes for each. If 30 seconds out of those 19 minutes just answered my single question, can I install it alone, or is there an SSH server running when any Live DVD or CD is booted, then I will be able to either immediately dismiss the distro, or give it more attention.\r\n\r\nSome distros are fundamentally bad. For example Regolith Linux uses the i3 window manager, which is a dead loss for accessibility.\r\n\r\nSome distros are a disgrace, like the interview Ken gave with the lead developer of Mint a couple of years ago when the dev declared \"we\'re not interested in accessibility.\"\r\n\r\nBut just take thirty seconds or so to answer a11y fundamentals.\r\n\r\nIt is very annoying when so many distros are Debian or Ubuntu derivatives, but have stripped out the speech from the installer','2019-06-25 07:57:44'),
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(2730,2839,'2019-06-29 10:17:50','TonyH1212','Further responce to Mike and Bob','Thanks to you both for the feedback, Bob I figured you didn\'t expect a full run down of all the languages, but a quick few seconds to mention that languages other than English are listed or not is useful in a review. \r\n\r\nLikewise Mike, I appreciate your needs and a quick note to say if the distro is friendly to those with a sight impairment would assist many in the community. \r\n\r\nActually re visiting the last episode and PCLinuxOS I was not able to work out how I could enable a voice assisted install for this OS and likewise on a couple of others I tried in a VM, so mentioning this at the start of the review wouldn\'t take long.\r\n\r\nRegards Tony','2019-06-29 10:31:07'),
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(2731,438,'2019-07-03 12:04:08','Viper','Archive of podcasts','Hello! I notice you have recommended FossGeek, and I would like to listen myself but have been unable to find a copy of the files... does anyone have a copy on an old hard disk I can have?\r\n\r\nThank you!','2019-07-03 12:09:27'),
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(2732,2851,'2019-07-08 13:48:30','Ken Fallon','Cars parked over the put','Hi Jeroen,\r\n\r\nWhat do you do when cars are parked over the hydrants ?\r\n\r\nKen.','2019-07-08 14:31:57'),
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(2733,2851,'2019-07-08 19:17:26','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','I guess you never know when someone is going to do something unexpected yet awesome. I loved this show.','2019-07-08 19:36:33'),
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(2734,2852,'2019-07-09 08:46:47','tuturto','thanks','Thank you for the series and the wrap-up episode. It\'s been a pleasure to follow to series and learn about awk. I don\'t use awk by myself, but it\'s always good to know that there are plenty of tools to choose from when there\'s specific need.','2019-07-09 11:16:34'),
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(2735,2852,'2019-07-09 10:47:55','Hipstre','Thank You!','Thank you for the series, you guys! It was great. I learned more than I wanted to. I tried hard to not learn, but you made me. Not just about awk, but about programming, information theory, and data structures, history, bash, etc...','2019-07-09 11:16:34'),
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(2736,2852,'2019-07-09 14:25:28','norrist','HPR Epic','This series will stand out as one of the highlights of HPR. Thank you b-yeezi and Dave Morriss.','2019-07-09 14:27:20'),
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(2737,2787,'2019-07-09 20:47:22','operat0r','Part2 ?','I still want to work on this but this is what I have so far:\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://rmccurdy.com/scripts/PupProxyCheck/\r\n\r\nI want to convert my bash scripts in https://rmccurdy.com/scripts/proxy to puppeteer','2019-07-09 20:51:44'),
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(2738,2854,'2019-07-11 04:31:40','tuturto','Bagpipes for the win!','Hilarious and informative episode at the same time. Thanks for recording it!','2019-07-11 08:20:55'),
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(2739,2852,'2019-07-13 17:08:55','Dave Morriss','Many thanks for the kind words','Thank you tuturto, Hipstre and norrist for your comments!\r\n\r\nWe had a lot of fun putting the series together. I certainly found out more about awk than I knew before, and I think the same sentiment was expressed by my collaborator b-yeezi.\r\n\r\nThere\'s nothing quite like telling others about a thing to make you understand it better. ;-)','2019-07-13 17:10:12'),
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(2740,2854,'2019-07-18 16:55:00','Dave Beck','Rusted Pipes','I\'m guessing that song wasn\'t written for the bagpipe.','2019-07-18 16:59:28'),
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(2741,2854,'2019-07-18 17:38:23','jezra','pipes up!','Thank you tutoro; that bit of bad piping is a melody I learned after NYBill asked me for some audio to represent time passing. It is very few notes, but I always mess it up. :)\r\n\r\nIt should be noted that no songs were ever written for bagpipes. Songs are compositions that are to be sung by a voice, not played on an instrument. :)','2019-07-18 17:47:36'),
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(2742,2859,'2019-07-29 00:18:43','dodddummy','I disagree with just about all the opinions expressed in this episode.','Chalk me up for the opposite on just about all the views expressed in this episode. Just in case someone puts together a debate :) \r\n\r\nGood to hear the discussion but I sure do disagree with so much of what was said.\r\n\r\nHere\'s to your right to say it!','2019-07-29 09:36:15'),
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(2743,2859,'2019-07-29 00:25:46','dodddummy','1st hour, that is.','The last comment was referring to the first 1hr of the episode.','2019-07-29 09:36:15'),
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(2744,2869,'2019-08-01 14:29:33','Jon Kulp','Recycled Recumbents','What a pleasure to hear this show and to know I had some small part in inspiring you to do it! That\'s tremendous. I haven\'t ridden my recumbent in about a year mainly because when we moved to the new house I didn\'t have room for it. It is still at my old house in the storage shed, but we\'ve recently cleared out some space in the garage and I\'m going to bring it over and start riding it to work again. It still rides great and still elicits many comments from all who see it. Best of luck with yours, mine was definitely the most satisfying project I\'ve ever done. \r\n\r\nBTW my daily ride now is the 1985 Schwinn World Tour I was working on in HPR episode 2154. I love this bike too!','2019-08-01 14:32:10'),
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(2745,2859,'2019-08-05 10:27:06','Mike Ray','First hour','Ridiculous comments about guns, as usual from most \'leftpondians\'.\r\n\r\nIn countries where it is very, very difficult to get hold of guns, there are virtually no mass shootings.\r\n\r\nI see Fox News etc, and by etc I mean right wing media, are blaming video games for this last weekends 2 mass shootings.\r\n\r\nJapan is a culture with a deeper video game habit than the US, but there are no mass shootings. Reason? Two-fold, it is not video games doing it, and, more importantly, guns are very rare in Japan.\r\n\r\nIf you make it easier for a teenager to buy an assault rifle than it is to buy a six pack, you will get mass shootings.\r\n\r\nEspecially when you have a white supremecist as a president.\r\n\r\nAnd don\'t give me that shit about needing an AK47 fitted with a 100 round mag to keep the racoons away from your bins','2019-08-05 10:55:50'),
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(2746,2859,'2019-08-05 18:44:09','MrsXoke','To Mike Ray','What is a leftpodian? \r\n\r\nIn countries where it is difficult to get guns there are fewer mass shootings, however, there is not less violence. The vehicle for the violence is different. Not the violence.\r\n\r\nI saw one commentator of Fox blame video games, and a number of others ignore or question that belief. Sadly you can\'t believe anything you see on TV as a whole any more.\r\n\r\nJapan is a culture with deeper roots in family and the importance of morality. They don\'t necessarily agree with the \"to each their own\" adage that western society loves. They openly shame anything and anyone that does not fit their norm. Societal acceptance is a major driving force in all that they do. Perhaps that is what is missing? A society enforced moral code and shaming when you don\'t fit in the box? Is that what we should go back to? \r\n\r\nI don\'t condone and it isn\'t easy for a teenager to buy alcohol, drugs, or firearms here. I do believe in education for all of those things. I also know that there are always the ones that get or do these things anyway. Maybe this is where the Japan method comes in? In the past in this nation more homes have guns, and more homes had both parents, and maybe a strong family bond, and parents that enforced social norms helped? I don\'t know the answer and decades of change would be required and still not provide true proof.\r\n\r\nWhy is it that a conversation cannot be held without a person who doesn\'t like Trump, bringing him up? He really isn\'t the biggest problem this nation has. He certainly isn\'t the solution, but isn\'t the biggest problem. I don\'t like him either, but lets dispense with using Trump is a racist as a defense for a point of view. \r\n\r\nI live in a country that has a group of people who have decided that they are accepting and tolerant of everyone unless you own guns, have conservative values, attend church and believe in Christian values. This hypocrisy is why there is so much division and hatred. I can\'t speak for other nations.','2019-08-05 19:10:45'),
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(2747,2859,'2019-08-06 00:24:29','Mike Ray','To Mike Ray','\'Leftpondian\'. Person who is on the eastern side of the Atlantic, IOW, an American. As opposed to a \'Rightpondian\', a person on the eastern side of \'the pond\', IOW a European. Not meant as an insult, just a common idiiom.\r\n\r\nYou know, Europe, that place where we have no \'right to bare arms\' which was written when all guns fired a single shot and then took a minute or so to reload, or when the people you were busy slaughtering in their millions were keen to kill you.\r\n\r\nA time when there were no shopping malls and no enclosed school or college campuses which are easy targets for some evil nutter with an assault rifle, which he or she got out of a vending machine, or so it seems.\r\n\r\nWords that are no longer fit for purpose.\r\n\r\nCan\'t buy a Kinder Egg, it\'s a choking hazard to the toddler on the back seat of the car, sitting next to mom\'s purse, from where he/she can so easily pluck her gun and shoot her in the back of the head.\r\n\r\n1987, Federal government ban steel tipped lawn darts after just ONE toddler is killed by one. But don\'t take away our right to pack war hardware just in case we have to stop the odd racoon pitching over the dumpsters, despite thousands of young and old alike being killed year on year for no better reason than the power of the gun lobby\r\n\r\n\'The best thing to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.\' Don\'t see many examples of this happening','2019-08-06 07:49:31'),
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(2748,2859,'2019-08-06 06:16:35','Mike Ray','Active shooter drills','I understand it is normal in the USA now for many schools to drill the kids on what to do in the event of an active shooter.\r\n\r\nAny society where that is necessary has a fundamental problem.\r\n\r\nThere is no justification for the private ownership of automatic or semi automatic weapons.\r\n\r\nAnd we could all stay silent on the subject of the far right and routinely homophobic, Islamophobic, sexist morons taking over power. But what is that quote? All it takes for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing. That is a quote so I make no apology for the masculine \'men\'. It equally applies to any gender nowadays.\r\n\r\nI believe that part of the constitution that enshrines \'the right to bare arms\' was written before repeating weapons even existed. So that part is no longer fit for purpose.\r\n\r\nHere in the UK even owning a hand gun will get you four years in prison, even before you use it to commit any fellony. And we have not had a mass shooting since the 1996 Dunblane massacre that lead to the changes in the law.\r\n\r\nWe are certainly not telling our kids \"run, tell, hide\" or otherwise drilling them on what to do in the event that anything more serious than the wheels falling of the bus occurs','2019-08-06 07:49:32'),
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(2749,2859,'2019-08-06 06:22:54','Mike Ray','Faith and values','And by the way, I do not accept that morality is in decline because of the decline in Church going or church going values. Church goers do not have a monopoly on morality. I have never set foot in a church voluntarily in all my 55 years, but I have a very strong sense of right and rong.\r\n\r\nSome of the things I regard as wrong...shooting people, telling non-whites who were born here to \"go back where you came from\", sexually assaulting small boys left in my charge, demanding money with evangelical menaces to fund my private jets, refusing to teach evolution in schools, denying the poorest in society medical care to keep taxes for the richest as low as possible','2019-08-06 07:49:32'),
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(2750,2859,'2019-08-08 14:06:43','folky','You can fastforward','Mike and dodddummy, I\'m, completly on your side. But you know, you can fastforward. It\'s not the first time you get such opinions on the NYE-show and nowadays I just jump to the next 10-minute-chunk and if necessary the next, because it\'s not worth wasting lifetime to listen to it and get upset.','2019-08-08 14:16:01'),
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(2751,2876,'2019-08-12 10:52:07','Bookewyrmm','Salt','Many times if you know there is too much salt, (especially in soup) you can add a 1/2 of a peeled potato and it will absorb the salt. The potato can be either cooked and eaten or discarded.','2019-08-12 11:20:56'),
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(2752,2863,'2019-08-13 23:13:49','clacke','Dynamic vs static linking doesn\'t matter','Thank you for your thoughts! I started listening thinking I would agree, but I didn\'t.\r\n\r\nVulnerabilities do not generally come in through technical details like what style of linking is used. Your attack surface remains the same. Vendoring the code doesn\'t help either, that\'s just a distribution and versioning issue.\r\n\r\nThe only real way to reduce dependencies is to reduce them; Write the code ourselves, or make sure we fully understand our dependencies.\r\n\r\nHere\'s an article that goes further into this: https://medium.com/@kori/systems-easily-understandable-by-one-person-f92e8613e2e','2019-08-14 07:18:14'),
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(2753,2876,'2019-08-17 16:27:43','Windigo','Re: Salt','Thanks Bookewyrmm, I will definitely give that a try!','2019-08-17 18:08:03'),
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(2754,2876,'2019-08-20 16:56:53','Dave Morriss','Loved this. I was right there with you in the kitchen','Hi Windigo,\r\n\r\nGreat show. I loved the detail and the ambient sounds.\r\n\r\nI was preparing a giant batch of ratatouille as I listened - for my kids who don\'t live with me, but for whom I make dinner two to three nights each week.\r\n\r\nHearing you taking the picture I dashed to the notes to look at it but ... nothing!!\r\n\r\nStill, the meal sounded great.\r\n\r\nBest wishes,\r\nDave','2019-08-20 17:38:12'),
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(2755,2884,'2019-08-22 02:36:10','Clinton Roy','fantastic','Thank you so much for this episode, I\'ve never heard someone go through this process, it was wonderful to go along the ride with you.','2019-08-22 08:25:10'),
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(2756,2884,'2019-08-22 09:54:21','tuturto','awesome','This was really great episode to listen to. Reminded me of times when we messed around with 4 tracks as students.','2019-08-22 10:13:03'),
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(2757,2882,'2019-08-22 13:56:32','Dave Morriss','Great project and excellent show','I installed ONICS after your first show about it but didn\'t use it much. I haven\'t had a great need to do network monitoring or troubleshooting in the interim.\r\n\r\nI reinstalled after this show and followed along with your examples and found them very helpful. The capabilities of ONICS seem very impressive. I\'m looking forward to hearing more!\r\n\r\nDave','2019-08-22 14:03:05'),
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(2758,2881,'2019-08-22 17:39:19','Jonathan Kulp','Automation is nice','Thanks for the shoutout, Ken. I love this clever use of the silence finder. I’ve never tried this but definitely will next time I’m transferring an LP. Nicely done!','2019-08-22 19:57:58'),
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(2759,2884,'2019-08-22 20:31:24','jezra','super fun!','What a fun episode. Thank you. Did you determine the HPR melody by ear, or did you happen to stumble upon some sheet music?','2019-08-22 20:55:58'),
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(2760,2884,'2019-08-22 22:35:35','Jon Kulp','By ear','Thanks for the comments,y\'all. There\'s no sheet music as far as I\'m aware. I sat down and wrote out a chord sheet about 10 minutes before I started recording haha! I\'ve been doing this a long time and it\'s not a very hard song. It does have one strange chord progression that I had to think about a couple of times before I figured it out, but otherwise it\'s pretty easy. I also ran through the melody a couple of times on the harmonica. It was fun. Maybe sometime I\'ll do a proper job of it and make a recording without annoying mess-ups that can actually be used as the outro music.','2019-08-23 07:20:14'),
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(2761,2884,'2019-08-24 12:26:05','mcnalu','4tracks4TW','Loved this show. I had a four track which was a model up from this I think - a Portasound 04. I got it in 1987 or 1988 and recorded a lot of music on it and pushed it to its absolute limit by bouncing tracks. In fact I still have that four track and all the cassettes so I promise herewith to dig it out from the back of the cupboard and see if it works in an upcoming HPR show. Thanks Jon, superb stuff!','2019-08-24 12:44:07'),
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(2762,2884,'2019-08-24 13:44:52','Jon Kulp','Can’t bounce','Hey McNalu that’d be great to hear you do a show about your 4-track! One of the things mine **can’t** do is bounce multiple tracks down to one and free up tracks for more. The Porta 02 is REALLY minimal. Bouncing is a key feature of typical 4-tracks and it would fill a significant gap in my coverage if you talked about that for us. I’d love to hear that.','2019-08-24 13:48:16'),
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(2763,2882,'2019-08-25 13:41:10','Gabriel Evenfire','Good to hear','Thanks for the feedback Dave, and glad that this installation went more smoothly than the last one. Next episode is in and I\'ve scripted about half of the one to follow.','2019-08-25 13:42:39'),
|
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(2764,2887,'2019-08-27 06:29:03','tuturto','Eagerly waiting for more','I\'m sitting on edge of my seat, waiting to have more of this to listen to. Interesting topic and very close to my heart.','2019-08-27 06:49:52'),
|
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(2765,2887,'2019-08-28 19:01:00','Ken Fallon','A future podcast in the future feed','https://hackerpublicradio.org/rss-future.php','2022-02-14 13:25:11'),
|
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(2766,2884,'2019-08-29 04:25:54','johanv','great show','I was listening to this with a big smile on my face. It was great fun to hear you actually create this piece of craftmanship!','2019-08-29 08:14:34'),
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(2767,2890,'2019-08-31 13:04:02','Dave Morriss','solder/\"sodder\"/souder','Hi Ahuka,\r\n\r\nI always enjoy your reports from Penguicon. This one was great!\r\n\r\nAs to your reflection on the pronunciation of the word \"solder\" I have a few remarks:\r\n\r\n- The word is derived from the Latin \"solidare\" - to make solid\r\n\r\n- Yes, the British do generally pronounce it to rhyme with \"colder\" and \"folder\". This seems to make sense given that its form is very similar. Pronouncing \"folder\" as \"fodder\", even in dialect, would be very confusing, for example.\r\n\r\n- The French equivalent is \"souder\", which sounds (to my ears) like \"sooday\".\r\n\r\n- I have seen it suggested that the USA pronunciation is derived from the French.\r\n\r\nLanguage is fun! I recently bought a Chinese hot air soldering gun (SMD Rework Station) from Amazon. I particularly like the legend on the box which says:\r\n\r\n\"Soft and spiral wind can welds all chips\"\r\n\r\nWords to live by ;-)','2019-08-31 13:06:08'),
|
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(2768,2881,'2019-09-01 10:00:00','Hipstre','2881 - Audacity: Split Album into Tracks','Thank you, Ken! Combined with youtube-dl, one can pretty much acquire every single piece of music one has ever wanted in a single night with this. You\'ve sped up my workflow considerably. Also great for breaking podcasts into chunks, if like me, one has a car stereo with an incredibly slow fast-forward/rewind function.','2019-09-01 14:14:40'),
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(2769,2891,'2019-09-02 11:54:54','Ken Fallon','Where was Ken ?','I ran out of gas! I got a flat tire! I didn’t have change for cab fare! I lost my tux at the cleaners! I locked my keys in the car! An old friend came in from out of town! Someone stole my car! There was an earthquake! A terrible flood! Locusts! IT WASN’T MY FAULT, I SWEAR TO GOD!','2019-09-02 11:57:24'),
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(2770,2891,'2019-09-03 13:40:00','Jon Kulp','Heroic effort!','Great job on the Community News, Dave. Thanks for stepping up and flying solo.','2019-09-03 13:56:23'),
|
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(2771,2891,'2019-09-04 12:51:17','Dave Morriss','Thanks Jon','I was slightly shocked at being there on my own, but I have \"ridden shotgun\" a few times now and have done a few shows with other co-hosts, so I didn\'t panic ;-)\r\n\r\nI\'m glad it turned out tolerably well, and now that Ken has been released by the Dutch Mafia/Yakuza/aliens we\'ll hopefully be back to normal next time!','2019-09-04 12:52:30'),
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(2772,2893,'2019-09-05 16:06:37','timttmy','Trem pedal','Hi NYbill \r\nGlad to hear you got the trem pedal working.\r\nIt came from ebay. If anyone wants to try and build one just search for.\r\nDIY Tremolo Pedal All Kit With 3PDT Switch and 1590B\r\nI may grab one for myself but first I\'ve got to finish rebuilding my guitar.','2019-09-05 16:07:44'),
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(2773,2895,'2019-09-06 08:15:08','Ken Fallon','Very dissapointed','Just walked around the neighbourhood and all four have a parked over it. I was hoping that the solution to covered hydrants was to crush the cars, but alas.','2019-09-06 08:16:34'),
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(2774,2893,'2019-09-06 13:31:13','Jon Kulp','No delay','Bill! Thank you so much for closing the loop on this project. You really left us hanging with part 1 of it. Very glad to hear that you got it working. \r\n\r\nI\'m sorry to report that I ordered a similar kit from China for a digital delay pedal for about $20, and after assembling it, all I got was a loud hum and couldn\'t even get the case to close right. I don\'t think I\'m cut out for assembling small electronics. The \"instructions\" were exactly like yours, simply a photocopy of the circuit board without any real instructions.','2019-09-06 13:35:06'),
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|
(2775,1328,'2019-09-06 18:14:21','Vegewurst','Insightful','As someone who\'s just started working on a general adult psychiatry ward I really appreciated hearing what it was like on the other side of the curtain.\r\n\r\nI will never claim to understand what it\'s like to have such a condition but I feel like I have a better idea. One thing we are taught is that patients with schizophrenia are more often scared than anything else (before angry, violent, dangerous, manipulative, whatever negative preconception you want to put in) and your podcast has really confirmed that for me!\r\n\r\nThank you!\r\n','2019-09-09 15:01:37'),
|
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|
(2776,2893,'2019-09-07 03:35:24','NYbill','Hit and Miss','Thanks for cluing us in on the source, Timttmy.\r\n\r\nJon, these things are a trick. I really think some manufacturer orders 10,000+ of these from China, assembled, then brands them all for resale. \r\n\r\nThe factory making them might as well sell a kit with all the parts and make some money on the side. :P\r\n\r\nHowever, you\'re left on your own to figure the thing out. \r\n\r\nThen again I do like a challenge. It was a fun project.','2019-09-07 08:57:22'),
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(2777,2895,'2019-09-10 18:14:57','Steve','Volunteer Firefighters','You\'ve said that you are a volunteer fire fighter. I\'m wondering if most fire firefighters in the Netherlands are volunteers. In the US there are volunteer departments for sure in rural and small town areas. But most of the medium to larger cities have fire departments where the fire fighters are employees of the city or county.','2019-09-10 18:32:41'),
|
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(2778,2904,'2019-09-23 11:16:43','tuturto','clever','Really clever way of doing this. When I saw the headline, my mind started immediately working through all kinds of algorithms one could use shortening urls. Turns out, nothing complicated is needed.','2019-09-23 11:18:27'),
|
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|
(2779,2909,'2019-09-27 13:08:48','archer72','Interesting','I want to say that this is a very interesting topic. I may not understand it all, but there are many people here who would take well to this subject. Keep it up.','2019-09-27 13:12:38'),
|
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(2780,2910,'2019-09-27 13:11:46','archer72','Nice show','If I was not already on Mastodon, this would be an enticing move.','2019-09-27 13:12:38'),
|
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(2781,2906,'2019-09-27 13:14:43','archer72','Nice show','Way above my head, but great show.','2019-09-27 13:19:56'),
|
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(2782,2903,'2019-09-27 13:17:33','archer72','Awesome','I really hope this takes off. I would be a great addition to the next Raspberry Pi edition.','2019-09-27 13:19:56'),
|
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|
(2783,2907,'2019-09-27 13:20:56','archer72','Nice series','I am enjoying this series, the banter between everyone is pretty cool.','2019-09-27 13:31:58'),
|
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(2784,2844,'2019-09-29 14:56:15','Michael','Muffled sound because of low path filtering.','Hello Jon,\r\n\r\nlate comment, but I have a huge lag in listening.\r\n\r\nOne more explanation of the muffled sound when playing back at quarter speed, is the inherent low path filtering of the process of getting the sound on the reel. Assume, the original track contains tones in the 10 kHz range, these become 40kHz tones in the sped up version. When playing the quick version to record them on tape, the player has to correctly reproduce those high pitched tones and the recorder has to be able to bring those to tape. Depending on the frequency response of this chain, I expect this to be the bottle neck. When playing at quarter speed, the highest pitch you will get is only a fourth of the highest frequency the recorder could handle.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2019-09-29 15:03:43'),
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(2785,2913,'2019-10-02 19:50:19','ClaudioM','+1 on Chocolatey Recommendation','Really enjoyed the episode. I\'ve known about Chocolatey for some years now and it\'s been a godsend for me when I have to use Windows at work (I primarily use Linux and OpenBSD). I actually have a scheduled task that runs the \"cup all -y\" command daily (this command sequence upgrades all packages installed via Chocolatey and accepts all prompts). I also use MSYS2 for a proper Unix-like shell with pacman for running updates so that I can use all the CLI apps I use on Linux/OpenBSD. PSTools is another suite of tools that I can\'t live without.\r\n\r\nUltimately, one needs to use the tools that work for them, whatever that is. If it\'s Windows or macOS, great. If it\'s Linux or a BSD or something completely different, great. If it\'s TempleOS, I\'ll have to raise an eyebrow, but still, great. :-)','2019-10-02 20:07:46'),
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(2786,2915,'2019-10-04 09:12:13','Ken Fallon','More shows on ....','MrChromebox.techCustom coreboot firmware and firmware utilities for your Chromebook/Chromebox\r\nCockpit\r\nControlling the lid display and sleep with logind.conf - Login manager configuration file\r\nWake-on-LAN\r\nUSB-C Docks and Linux\r\nREAPER Digital Audio Workstation\r\n\r\n\r\nNo pressure.','2019-10-04 12:48:08'),
|
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(2787,2900,'2019-10-05 18:27:39','Jeroen baten','Hope you will find time to discuss Okuna','Hi,\r\n\r\nI really loved to listen too this show and learned a thing or two.\r\n\r\nAs one of the sponsors of the Okuna (previously Openbook) kickstarter project I really look forward to your review of this in one of your shows if you ever find time or interest.\r\n\r\nKind regards,\r\nJeroen Baten','2019-10-05 19:45:56'),
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(2788,2911,'2019-10-05 20:58:37','Beeza','HPR 2911','Hi Jezra.\r\n\r\nI use a Wireless ISP in Shropshire, a rural county in England. The signal is bounced between relays mounted on the hilltops and beamed down to villages and farms below. The \"line of sight\" problem is resolved by having a few low power sub-relays positioned around the area at lower elevations. For example, I cannot see my nearest relay from the roof of my house, but a grain silo on the farm next door can, so I take my signal from a sub-relay mounted on top of the silo. It works great and, since the ISP is only a small company it must be quite cheap too.\r\n\r\nPerhaps one of the WISPs in your area could be persuaded to look into this approach to expand their customer base.','2019-10-05 21:03:05'),
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(2789,2900,'2019-10-05 21:48:23','Kevin O\'Brien','No plans for now','I don\'t have any plans to cover Okuna. Maybe you can do a show on that.','2019-10-05 21:56:03'),
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(2790,2909,'2019-10-07 23:15:34','Gabriel Evenfire','Thanks for the feedback','Hey, thanks for the feedback. I\'ll try to continue to build on the \"fundamentals\" as the series continues.','2019-10-08 06:55:09'),
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(2791,2906,'2019-10-07 23:20:55','Gabriel Evenfire','Love the idea here...','Hey b-yeezi, just wanted to say that I really enjoyed this one. The topic of data analysis is definitely fascinating. Clearly, from your comments, some folks don\'t have data mining or data science in mind when they build applications, but this episode gives one a very strong notion of why everyone should.','2019-10-08 06:55:10'),
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(2792,2909,'2019-10-17 08:48:15','gerryk','Yet another top episode','Thanks for another top episode, Gabriel. Though I am pretty experienced in this field, I stil find this stuff fascinating & educational.\r\nI have finally gotten round to downloading ONICS and look forward to playing with it.\r\n/ Gerry','2019-10-17 09:42:55'),
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(2793,2921,'2019-10-17 19:33:28','jezra','what a fun adventure','stinging nettles, and cobwebs, and badgers! :)','2019-10-17 19:48:06'),
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(2794,2921,'2019-10-17 20:36:42','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','I agree with Jezra, this was tons of fun.','2019-10-17 20:54:14'),
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(2795,2925,'2019-10-19 19:09:39','lostnbronx','I Never Met Fifty, But I Knew Him','I posted this over at the memorial wall for his obituary, but it probably bears repeating here.\r\n\r\nI knew him by his online handle, 5150. He was simply a great, great guy. A fine podcaster, and tireless member of the Hacker Public Radio community, among others.\r\n\r\nHe offered encouragement by the bucketful, and constructive criticism where needed. A good soul, and a man of strong character, who displayed loyalty and dependability each time I spoke with him.\r\n\r\nI never met the man, but Fifty was my good friend.\r\n\r\nMay he rest well.','2019-10-21 13:40:16'),
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(2796,2895,'2019-10-20 09:52:32','Don','great podcast','hi Jeroen, After meeting you at Oggcamp19, it is great to put a face to the voice, hope the talk went well on the Sunday, also after meeting you and Yannick (and the crew at the HPR stand) I am inspired to look and see if there is anything I can do a podcast about (so I can contribute back to the community). Take care my friend and thank you for sharing your experiences in such an enjoyable/informative way.\r\nDon','2019-10-21 13:40:17'),
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(2797,2928,'2019-10-29 20:11:07','b-yeezi','Thanks for this episode','I may be in the minority, but I love thinking about Markov Chains and other probabilistic algorithms. It is interesting how this is implemented in Haskell. Comparing it to the same algorithm in Python allowed me to follow Haskell structure and syntax for the first time.','2019-10-29 20:12:45'),
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(2798,2928,'2019-10-31 07:31:47','tuturto','thanks for the feedback!','b-yeezi, hearing that you were able to follow Haskell structure and syntax made me extremely happy! It\'s quite alien looking language with odd syntax and explaining it in podcast is pretty hard for me.\r\n\r\nMarkov chains (and other procedural generation methods) are close to my heart as I have been tinkering with games for a long time. I rather try and write algorithm that generates me content and be surprised by the results than write it by myself and know exactly what to expect.','2019-10-31 09:13:34'),
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(2799,2936,'2019-11-04 01:11:34','lostnbronx','Ken\'s Voice Is Better Than espeak','For my part, Ken\'s reading of the opening info is far, far better than espeak. Then again, a screaming cat would be better. I\'ve brought up what an incredible turn-off that espeak intro is to new listeners on the email list before, and was hooted down. But, if you\'re asking for opinions, well, this is mine.','2019-11-04 07:34:41'),
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(2800,2935,'2019-11-05 09:07:52','Ken Fallon','That sucks','2400 liters per second is 2.4 m^3/s (cubic meters per second) or 84,76 ft³/s or 634,01 gallons_per_second_us_liquid','2019-11-05 09:13:55'),
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(2801,2935,'2019-11-05 09:15:24','Ken Fallon','That blows','I think this the video you refereed to \"Backdraft training\" by Keith Thomas\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Et_Y_kZXoQQ','2019-11-05 09:17:15'),
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(2802,2935,'2019-11-05 09:55:13','Ken Fallon','You\'re Fired','Can you go into how it works with relation to working as a part time fire-fighter. \r\nHow often were you called out ? \r\nAre there laws obliging companies to give you the time off ?\r\nWhat happens if you get injured - who pays the unemployment benefit (WW uitkering) ? Can you get fired from your main job ?\r\nHow much do you make as a volunteer fire-fighter ?\r\nCan you explain the role of the Junior Fire-fighting teams ?','2019-11-05 13:33:20'),
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(2803,2936,'2019-11-05 19:34:00','Jon Kulp','Pots','Thanks for holding it down solo this month, Ken! And yes I did think of using a potentiometer instead of a resistor, but this clock\'s case didn\'t have much wiggle room and I wasn\'t up for anything more challenging. A volume knob for the alarm would be fantastic, for sure.','2019-11-05 22:09:02'),
|
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(2804,2939,'2019-11-07 07:47:26','Ken Fallon','Clarification','As a result of this show there is now an \"⇧Upload⇧\" button on every page. \r\n\r\n!!! Please note we *do* use your email address everywhere !!!\r\n\r\nIt is associated with your episode and will live on forever \r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/request_a_slot.php#requesting_slot\r\n\r\n\"Note: This email address will be published on the HPR website and will be given out in the feeds, so please use a public email address for this purpose. Where we publish it we pad it with dot nospam at-sign nospam dot.\r\ni.e. hpr@example.com becomes hpr.nospam@nospam.example.com \"','2022-02-14 13:25:11'),
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(2805,2940,'2019-11-08 14:06:49','ClaudioM','Simple Mastodon Timeline View Option','Great episode on Mastodon and the various instances.\r\n\r\nBTW, I heard that you noticed the interface looked like Tweetdeck. You can change that if you go into Preferences-->Appearance and uncheck the box for the \"Enable advanced web interface\". This will make the interface much simpler with only the column of the timeline you\'ve chosen (Home, Notifications, Local timeline, or Federated timeline) on the list at the right of the page. The instance I\'m on (mastodon.xyz) is running version 2.9.3 of Mastodon, so anything at that version or greater should have this option.','2019-11-08 14:08:37'),
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(2806,2942,'2019-11-12 04:46:41','tuturto','welcome','Welcome and thanks for the great first episode.\r\n\r\nLike you said, lisps are super-powerful languages that are fun to program with. I feel like lisp is perfect language to write the language you will use to solve your problem with.\r\n\r\nWhen I was coding in lisp (for hobby), I often wrote my program in language I wished I had and then added needed features to language I had with macros.','2019-11-12 08:01:34'),
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(2807,2936,'2019-11-19 16:01:52','clacke','Release order or episode order?','I haven\'t rewatched all the movies myself but when I do, and I hope I will with my son at some point, it will be in Machete Order (so named because it was first described on the nomachetejuggling blog).\r\n\r\nThe explanation why is full of spoilers and you can find it online. In short, it takes the journey of one soul, reexamines it through the story of another, then joins the stories in a grand finale.\r\n\r\nThe order is: IV V II III VI and then episode order from then on. It papers over some of Lucas\'s worst narrative mistakes and ruins none of the surprises except one.\r\n\r\nIf this seems silly, then release order. The prequels require original trilogy (TOT) knowledge to fully enjoy, and they ruin important surprises in TOT, so episode order is just not the way.','2019-11-19 16:29:06'),
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(2808,2943,'2019-11-21 02:58:34','Carl','Interesting Episode','Interesting ideas. I really enjoyed this episode and got a bit emotional at the end, which was unexpected.','2019-11-21 10:18:19'),
|
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(2809,2942,'2019-11-21 03:04:21','Carl','Well Done','I thought this was a great episode and the reading didn\'t bother me at all, your enthusiasm for lisps still came through. Made me want to check into one of them!','2019-11-21 10:18:19'),
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(2810,2942,'2019-11-22 08:49:55','gerryk','loved it','I have been a fan of LISPs for years. I haven\'t considered playing with Clojure until you mentioned it, so that\'s the next plan.\r\nGreat first episode.\r\nTY\r\ngerry','2019-11-22 09:00:50'),
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(2811,2944,'2019-11-27 22:07:16','Dave Morriss','This is wonderful','Hi Gabriel,\r\n\r\nIt\'s been a busy month and I have only just caught up with this show.\r\n\r\nI\'m amazed by what you have done here. I was running the script while my family were visiting and could see them checking Reddit and YouTube, etc! I could see my main router doing its thing, and my secondary router (being used mainly as a wireless access point and Ethernet switch) also doing what it does. I was impressed the display showed the names I had allocated in /etc/hosts ;-)\r\n\r\nNow they have left it\'s all a lot quieter with my mail client checking various mail feeds and Mastodon updating itself. Fascinating!\r\n\r\nI had a fairly detailed look at your Bash and Awk scripts. Impressive. I shall look further later. As you say, Perl would perhaps be better, but it\'s great to see how powerful (and lightweight) sed and awk can be.\r\n\r\nThanks for putting this together. I really enjoyed this episode.\r\n\r\nDave','2019-11-27 22:08:29'),
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(2812,2955,'2019-11-29 20:34:17','b-yeezi','Great first episode','Welcome to the HPR Host Crew! This was a great first episode. I look forward to you next one.','2019-11-29 20:35:32'),
|
||
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(2813,1585,'2019-11-30 10:32:35','timttmy','Thanks','Hi Ahuka\r\nI just wanted to let you know that I use this template _A_LOT_.\r\nI never studied business at school or even computing. I guess that I taught myself the basics of both over the years. \r\nI like the nice clean, simple layout of your template and have presented it along with proposals to business professionals. I even received a comment from an asset finance manager that they liked how clear the information had been laid out and presented without \"fluff\" trying to sugar coat figures.\r\nSo here I am again grabbing a clean template for another project. :-)\r\n\r\nThanks again.\r\n\r\n-timttmy','2019-11-30 10:47:33'),
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(2814,1585,'2019-11-30 20:10:34','Ahuka','I\'m glad it helped','I\'m really glad you found this useful. A fact not widely known in these parts is that I was once a financial manager, so I think my own experience factored into this. I love that these tutorials are still useful for people.','2019-11-30 20:57:54'),
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(2815,2957,'2019-12-03 11:36:42','Ken Fallon','Great series but ...','Hi LnB,\r\n\r\nGreat episode and great series. Can I ask that you include the link to the next movie in the previous one as it would be nice to have the ability to play along.\r\n\r\nJust like they do with the HPR Book Club.\r\n\r\nSpeaking of the Book Club.....','2019-12-03 13:00:38'),
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|
(2816,2957,'2019-12-04 00:33:34','lostnbronx','Links','I can do that, though it requires that I have the next one lined up in advance. That\'s a lot of organization! And, of course, this is not an exclusive series; anyone can post a review, and do it in any way they like.','2019-12-04 10:39:55'),
|
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(2817,2957,'2019-12-04 11:56:38','Ken Fallon','Good point','That said anyone planning a episode could add a comment or ping the maillist.\r\n\r\nOf course that would qualify as \"I owe you a show\" \r\n\r\nSpeaking of the HPR Book Club ...','2019-12-04 12:01:23'),
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(2818,2959,'2019-12-05 01:50:47','b-yeezi','No problem. I\'ll do it','Great show, Ken. I\'ve been minimally involved in GPodder.net since Stefan first made his announcements. Actually, I was the one that put his original post on the Jupiter Broadcasting and Ubuntu Podcast telegram channels.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been looking for a way to contribute more, and I think this show has provided me an answer (data management stuff). I\'m already on the slack channel, so I\'ll contact them directly.\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work.','2019-12-05 10:13:45'),
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(2819,2955,'2019-12-06 10:23:42','gerryk','great! clear and informational','Hi Daniel...\r\nMany thanks for a great epsiode. I have been dabbling in numerical analysis in Python for a few weeks. I think this is an area I would like to explore next.\r\nWill check out your YT for sure.\r\nRegards\r\nGerry','2019-12-06 10:29:22'),
|
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(2820,2956,'2019-12-10 23:03:26','jezra','No more postcards?','Dag nabbit! I just sent another one','2019-12-10 23:06:46'),
|
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(2821,2962,'2019-12-11 00:25:03','petard','I really enjoyed this','Thanks very much for making and posting this. I massively enjoyed listening, even if nearly everything about it is and will be out of reach for me for the foreseeable future. (I\'m a city creature and nothing resembling brazing is happening in any of my spaces any time soon.)\r\n\r\nI listened to this on my phone with only the benefit of the title on the screen and not the show notes. And I have to say, I was fully expecting that \"bespoke bike building\" was referring to a bespoke building to house bikes, or a [bike shed](https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/misc.html#bikeshed-painting).','2019-12-11 08:07:54'),
|
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(2822,2964,'2019-12-12 07:30:20','Ken Fallon','Yes it is of interest to Hackers','I did not know what a the name of a Bolo was.\r\n\r\nWho is the guy modelling the ties, because he looks nothing like Jon Kulp in my head.','2019-12-12 08:28:30'),
|
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(2823,2962,'2019-12-12 11:44:18','Jon Kulp','Excellent progress','This is looking really good! I wish I\'d known about the affordable torch you\'re using when I was building mine. I would definitely have bought one and probably sped up my completion b/c I kept having to wait for our metal shop to be open at a time I could go. It was especially nice to hear your reaction to learning how to braze weld because as a novice I went through the same series of emotions, kind of scared at first and completely stoked after a couple successful joints. It\'s very empowering to learn something like this, isn\'t it? Looking forward to the next episode.','2019-12-12 12:33:01'),
|
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(2824,2964,'2019-12-12 13:13:44','Jon Kulp','the model','Ken, I know I don\'t sound so bald-headed on the radio. People are always surprised by this when we meet F2F.','2019-12-12 13:51:54'),
|
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(2825,2967,'2019-12-17 16:32:54','BRonaldo','WWE','Interesting info. I remember in the early 90s watching the WWF with my dad. Now I know why they changed the name to WWE! The panda won the fight.','2019-12-17 16:36:47'),
|
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(2826,2965,'2019-12-19 00:20:34','Dave Morriss','Cool project!','Hi Beni,\r\n\r\nI remember Macsyma, the predecessor of Maxima. We used to run it on the VAXCluster at the university where I worked, for use by Maths students.\r\n\r\nYour project sounds very cool, wrangling Maxima to receive and process algebra. I\'m mathematically challenged, but I spent a fair bit of my working life in IT writing \"glue\" code to make bits of software talk to one another. This sounds like quite an undertaking!\r\n\r\nGood luck with it, Dave','2019-12-19 00:22:23'),
|
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(2827,2966,'2019-12-19 21:56:39','Jon Kulp','Legacy Tech','Thanks for a really interesting first episode! I don\'t have a history with Commodores (apart from a 1981 novelty belt buckle with a PET computer on it) but this sounds like a fun event and I geek out on old technology. Thanks for including pictures. Looking forward to more episodes!','2019-12-19 21:58:57'),
|
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(2828,2966,'2019-12-19 22:17:03','Dave Morriss','Great show!','Thanks for this Paul. A great first show and some interesting interviews.\r\n\r\nI never owned a Commodore computer but I worked in a university that had many of them. I remember visiting one of the engineering departments in the early 1980\'s which had a lab full of Commodore PETs. I was impressed by the way the top of the case, with the monitor attached, could be lifted up and kept in position - like working on the engine of a car!\r\n\r\nI bought a BBC Model B for my own use around that time. This was another 6502-based machine, which was very popular in the UK. My workplace ended up with lots of these too.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to hearing your further episodes on this subject!\r\n','2019-12-19 14:20:47'),
|
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(2829,2944,'2019-12-23 17:08:37','Gabriel Evenfire','Glad you liked it!','Hey Dave,\r\n\r\nI\'ve been behind on my listening too. Glad to hear that you liked the scripts and thanks for the feedback!','2019-12-23 17:10:09'),
|
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(2830,2932,'2019-12-24 16:07:22','Gabriel Evenfire','Loved the series','Hey lostinbronx,\r\n\r\nJust wanted to let you know that I really enjoyed listening to this series. I\'m a long-time RPG player, but can\'t say I\'ve ever done a space opera game. This was really more due to lack of friends w/ similar interests than lack of interest on my part. Well that land lack of hours in a day. :) It was fun to listen to and at times want to yell through the speakers \"no no, don\'t do that, do this!\". That included a few of the rule suggestions. I, like you, enjoy systems that get out of the way of the storytelling. (though I still like some \"crunch\" to them)\r\n\r\nAnyway, thanks for the chance to listen to another foray into the Stardrifter Universe.','2019-12-24 16:14:58'),
|
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|
(2831,2942,'2019-12-24 16:12:18','Gabriel Evenfire','Great first episode','Fantastic first episode. Delivery definitely didn\'t sound wooden! I love the LISP family as well, but this episode was the first time I\'ve heard someone talk about the unique power REPLs in the development environment. My editors have always been very basic and never head the interpreters embedded. I may have been missing out all this time! So thanks for showing something new to try out!','2019-12-24 16:14:58'),
|
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(2832,2947,'2019-12-24 16:14:57','Gabriel Evenfire','Enjoying this series','Just wanted to comment that I\'m definitely learning a lot from this series. While you\'ve shown that there is a lot of detail to cover, you have been doling it out in nice measures. Thanks and keep it up, please!','2019-12-24 16:16:10'),
|
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(2833,2924,'2019-12-24 16:17:37','Gabriel Evenfire','Fun to listen to as always','Nice show! Your DIY segments remind me that we don\'t have to accept things as they are and don\'t have to be afraid of trying to make them better. Thanks for the great show!','2019-12-24 16:46:27'),
|
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(2834,2963,'2019-12-24 16:24:00','Gabriel Evenfire','Great series','Just wanted to comment that this has been a great series. It\'s been fun to hear about all the ways that you\'ve customized your podcast listening experience. At first it sounded like we\'d heard it all after you covered the hardware, but listening to the options you\'ve put in the menus, you\'ve clearly got a lot more in there! My guess would be that you\'re not done either. (maybe never will be :) ) Thanks for the shows. Have always been a fan of your intro music.','2019-12-24 16:46:27'),
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|
(2835,2974,'2019-12-26 22:00:14','NYbill','Heh, editing...','I guess audio editing is a lot like proof reading text for me. I need to step away from it for quite a while or else I read right through my mistakes. Reading what I meant, not what I wrote.\r\n\r\nWhen I mention SRV and putting heavy strings on an old tele (breaking the nut). They were a set of 12\'s. I kept saying 10\'s. \r\n\r\n10\'s are what I usually run on solid body guitars. I sometimes put 11\'s on hollow/semi-hollow type electrics. You won\'t hurt your guitar going from 9\'s to 10\'s. But, 9\'s to 12\'s, that is a bit of a jump. \r\n\r\nBTW, I did end up putting 10\'s on this tele. I also pulled a bit more of the relief out of the neck. Then checked the intonation again after. I\'ve been plying the guitar ever since. I\'m not sure how quick I\'ll be to give it away now. Its playing sweet.','2019-12-26 22:13:21'),
|
||
|
(2836,2963,'2019-12-27 17:19:42','MrX','Re: Great series','Hi Gabriel, thanks for the nice comments glad you’ve enjoyed the series I do very little hacking on this projects these days but I think you are right about it never being finished. Just the other day I included a feature when downloading podcast to include in the message how many podcasts were downloaded.\r\n\r\nAlso glad you enjoyed intro music as I’ve probably already mentioned it was something I pulled together many years ago using cakewalk studio maybe version 4 and a creative labs Soundblaster AWE32 sound card. I used a midi keyboard to pull it all together. To be honest it’s been that long since I\'ve played a keyboard I’m not sure I still can.\r\n\r\nAnyway thanks for taking the time to comment and all the best \r\n\r\nMrX','2019-12-27 17:30:53'),
|
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|
(2837,95,'2020-01-01 07:18:18','pokey','A long overdue thank you.','Thank you for this episode. Your take on podcast \"sponsorships,\" and the way this episode made me laugh has been the inspiration for many of my own recordings for HPR, DevRandom, and now The Urandom Podcast. Its been more than 10 years, and I still remember HPR #0095 fondly (if not clearly). The commercial spoofs (which are very popular with my co-hosts, and possibly even with our listener) that I do from time to time on https://urandom-podcast.info/ are all just an attempt to share the cynical amusement I felt when I heard Security Wow!.\n','2022-06-03 04:04:53'),
|
||
|
(2838,2979,'2020-01-02 01:17:55','Dave','Like the show','Just wanted to say how much I like the episodes by Mr. Kulp.','2020-01-02 09:57:17'),
|
||
|
(2839,2988,'2020-01-15 17:51:50','ClaudioM','Welcome Back!','So good to have you back on HPR! Pretty neat story. Do you have any more like that? I\'m sure others would be interested in hearing stories like that.\r\n\r\nAgain, welcome back!','2020-01-15 17:55:22'),
|
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(2840,2989,'2020-01-18 16:01:25','beian','silence?','silence removal is not very kind to me... it made for good disjointed rambling though.','2020-01-18 16:03:23'),
|
||
|
(2841,2989,'2020-01-18 16:04:30','brian','oops','there is a crack in my screen, right where my name was misspelled in that comment.. at least i am laughing this morning.','2020-01-18 16:07:06'),
|
||
|
(2842,2988,'2020-01-20 16:02:06','Ken Fallon','Condolences on behalf of HPR','I was very sorry to hear about the passing of your friend and fellow hacker Allison. \r\n\r\n(https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2592)','2022-02-14 13:25:12'),
|
||
|
(2843,2991,'2020-01-20 18:35:32','Ken','Bigclive','Big Clive takes these things apart for fun and entertainment.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=bigclivedotcom+fog+machine','2020-01-20 18:36:41'),
|
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|
(2844,2992,'2020-01-29 21:10:15','Greg Nacu','Thanks for the episode!','Hi. Thank you for the publicity, and the HPR episode about my presentation of C64 OS at World of Commodore. \r\n\r\nI also appreciate your comments before and after the presentation. For more information about C64 OS the official website is c64os.com.','2020-01-29 21:22:57'),
|
||
|
(2845,3000,'2020-01-31 13:02:59','ClaudioM','Wow...just, WOW!','What a wonderful episode for 3000! I enjoyed this episode on my way to work. Chopin is one of my favorite composers and hearing his works just stirred my heart with emotion, especially the last two pieces. Thank you for sharing this with everyone and thank you HPR for a moving episode 3000!','2020-01-31 13:20:53'),
|
||
|
(2846,3000,'2020-02-02 17:32:30','Ahuka','Great show!','I loved this. I have previously supported a similar effort by Kimiko Ishizaka to record royalty-free versions of Bach. We need more free culture!','2020-02-02 18:26:36'),
|
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|
(2847,3000,'2020-02-02 21:04:37','mcnalu','Great!','Excellent show. Love Chopin.','2020-02-02 21:33:00'),
|
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|
(2848,2999,'2020-02-06 17:46:59','Ahuka','Great show!','Thanks for a very good presentation on this exciting protocol. I hope this does get taken up by major sites. The old username/password stuff is not nearly secure enough, and this could be a major upgrade.','2020-02-06 18:08:31'),
|
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(2849,3009,'2020-02-15 08:43:15','Ken Fallon','Mailing list Discussion','https://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2020-February/thread.html','2022-02-14 13:25:12'),
|
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|
(2850,3009,'2020-02-15 08:44:37','Ken Fallon','Murmer/Mumble','HPR fund a mumble service where you can directly connect to Mumble.\r\n\r\nch1.teamspeak.cc port 64747','2020-02-15 10:59:16'),
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(2851,3002,'2020-02-18 05:50:36','Windigo','Thanks for the series','I found all of the World of Commodore episodes you\'ve submitted to be very enjoyable. I don\'t have much experience with Commodores or that era of computing, and hearing what the community is currently able to achieve is fascinating\r\n\r\nThanks for the wonderful series!','2020-02-18 07:29:24'),
|
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|
(2852,3009,'2020-02-19 04:34:13','Peter Mortensen','The predecessor?','Linux Inlaws? Ha-ha-ha-ha. \r\n\r\nThe successor to Linux Outlaws (2007-2014)? en DOT wikipedia DOT org/wiki/Linux_Outlaws\r\n\r\nHow many will get that reference nearly 6 years later? All the listeners for which the closing of Linux Outlaws left a gaping hole in the podcast landscape?','2020-02-19 08:38:32'),
|
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(2853,3009,'2020-02-19 15:13:00','Chris','LinuxInlaws','@Peter: All will be revealed in a future episode soon. Stay tuned! :-)','2020-02-19 15:14:14'),
|
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|
(2854,3003,'2020-02-20 11:55:39','folky','Dark reader','Thanks for the recommendation of Dark Reader. It\'s really great. I just would wish it would work on all the about: pages too. really shocking when you suddenly got hit by the brightness.','2020-02-20 11:56:42'),
|
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|
(2855,3014,'2020-02-20 17:18:38','b-yeezi','Trying this tonight','Thanks for the show. I will be trying out mpg123 on one of my pis tonight!','2020-02-20 17:20:00'),
|
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|
(2856,3014,'2020-02-20 23:04:07','Jon Kulp','Still Streaming with URL Update','Thanks for the comment, I hope the Pi+mpg123 suits your needs. Mine is still working perfectly after about a month, though I had to update the URL for one of the streams. I love my Pi radio!','2020-02-20 23:06:26'),
|
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|
(2857,3014,'2020-02-20 23:04:45','b-yeezi','Issue with mpg123','I tried to use mpg123 with a remote stream and found the following problem on Ubuntu 19.10:\r\n\r\nThe URL MUST start with http:// and not https://, or else it looks to play a local file, and you get the error, \"file access error, (code 22)\". If stream redirects http to https, your stream should play. If it doesn\'t, you may be out of luck. For instance, I picked a random podcast on iTunes and it failed to redirect. On the other hand, using a file from HPR works just fine.','2020-02-20 23:06:26'),
|
||
|
(2858,3014,'2020-02-21 12:07:07','Jon Kulp','HTTP not HTTPS','You\'re right! I found the same thing but forgot to mention it in either the recording or the show notes. So far all of the streams I listen to work with the http prefix, though. I seem to recall that command-line VLC (cvlc) can play streams with https but I may be wrong. I\'m on my phone at the moment and can\'t verify.','2020-02-21 12:08:43'),
|
||
|
(2859,3013,'2020-02-24 12:18:26','crvs','So that\'s how you use shebangs!','After all these years I finally understand how you write an awk script! Thank you!','2020-02-24 12:27:25'),
|
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|
(2860,3013,'2020-02-24 12:55:39','Dave Morriss','Writing awk scripts','Glad the episode was helpful.\r\n\r\nIn case you missed it, there is a series \"Learning Awk\" on HPR which you can find here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/series.php?id=94\r\n\r\nThis has been restructured for publication on opensource.com, starting at https://opensource.com/article/19/10/intro-awk','2022-02-14 13:25:12'),
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|
(2861,3008,'2020-02-26 15:42:07','norrist','These 2 guys should get together more often','What a fun and wandering conversion from 2 interesting people. Someone should get these 2 together on a regular basis. Or they should start their own HPR series. Interesting listening.','2020-02-26 15:55:03'),
|
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|
(2862,3023,'2020-03-04 10:49:34','Dave Morriss','Bash arithmetic','The expression you use to increment \'i\' stands out to me:\r\n\r\ni=$((( ${i} +1 )))\r\n\r\nBash has pre- and post-increment arithmetic expressions and there\'s a compound command which lets you use:\r\n\r\n((i++))\r\n\r\nLook for \"compound commands\" and \"arithmetic evaluation\" in the Bash documentation. I covered some of this in https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1951\r\n\r\nFor example, the following one-liner sets and increments \'i\' as you do:\r\n\r\ni=1; for name in A B C; do echo \"$i: $name\"; ((i++)); done\r\n1: A\r\n2: B\r\n3: C','2022-02-14 13:25:13'),
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(2863,3023,'2020-03-04 16:08:55','Dave Morriss','Another Bash-ism that might be useful','I appreciate that you are not using Bash in your script, but unless you have some strong reason not to I\'d advise using it. Often \'sh\' is just a restricted form of Bash!\r\n\r\nIf you agree then you can change things like:\r\n\r\n line_num=$(printf \"${crew_member}\" | cut -d\',\' -f1)\r\n line_num=$(printf \"${crew_member}\" | cut -d\',\' -f2)\r\n\r\ninto:\r\n\r\n line_num=\"${crew_member%,*}\" # gets first element\r\n line_num=\"${crew_member#*,}\" # gets second element\r\n\r\nThis only deals with two-element comma-separated lists so it\'s not quite as flexible as \'cut\'.\r\n\r\nThe % provides suffix removal and # prefix removal. I covered this in show 1648 (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1648)','2022-02-14 13:25:13'),
|
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(2864,3023,'2020-03-04 18:08:21','nobody','There must be an easier way','The biggest problem with your scripting seems to be that you don\'t really know what tools are available and what options they have. My recommendation would be for you to just see what comes included with the coreutils and busybox, you\'ll find all kinds of wonderful little tools there.\r\n\r\nIn bash my solution to this would be this single line:\r\n\r\n paste ./ranks.txt ./position.txt <(shuf -n 10 first.txt) <(shuf -n 10 last.txt)\r\n\r\nIf you don\'t mind two crewmen having two the same name then you can add -r to the shuf flags, at least when using GNU coreutils.\r\n\r\nSince busybox\' ash lacks the wonderful process substitution of bash (the <(cmd) in the above) I would probably just do something like this:\r\n\r\n while read -r x do\r\n printf \'%s %s %sn\' \"$x\" \"$(shuf -n 1 first.txt)\" \"$(shuf -n 1 last.txt)\"\r\n done <(paste ranks.txt position.txt)\r\n\r\nWith larger files this ash compatible version would be quite inefficient and slow but I doubt that really matters here.','2020-03-04 18:10:29'),
|
||
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(2865,3023,'2020-03-04 18:11:54','nobody','Little correction to my comment','Forgot to actually remove the bashism... and forgot a semicolon\r\n\r\n paste ranks.txt position.txt | while read -r x; do\r\n printf \'%s %s %sn\' \"$x\" \"$(shuf -n 1 first.txt)\" \"$(shuf -n 1 last.txt)\"\r\n done','2020-03-04 18:23:38'),
|
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(2866,3023,'2020-03-05 04:04:22','Carl','Thanks for the comments','I asked for a critque so I appreciate the comments!\r\n\r\n@Dave\r\nI don\'t have any _strong_ reasons for not using bash, but it boils down to:\r\n- Most of the limited scripting I do is on Raspberry Pi and other SBC type devices, usually with Alpine Linux, which out of the box has /bin/sh as a symlink to busybox, so I work with that in lieu of installing bash.\r\n\r\n- I sort of like the extra challenge of not using bashisms, even if it does make things a bit harder/uglier than it needs to be.\r\n\r\nI\'m at a loss to explain where I came up with the triple parentheses for incrementing i. I just tried it on busybox and two seems to work fine (though three does also). The ++ form does not (as you note it would require bash) though I\'m familiar with that form, it just doesn\'t work within the constraints of busybox.','2020-03-05 08:00:11'),
|
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(2867,3023,'2020-03-05 04:05:12','Carl','Thanks for the comments','@nobody\r\n\r\nI looked at shuf for this but it\'s not a busybox builtin and not included out of the box with Alpine, though awk is, which is why I went with it to generate the random number pairs. So to say that I don\'t know what tools are available is perhaps a little unfair as I did state in the episode that I\'m limiting myself to busybox builtins. Imposing that limitation on myself is perhaps a little silly, but, it is a fact that I would have to install _something_ to get the additional functionality you reference, and that may not always be possible or desirable in embedded applications.\r\n\r\nActually, I wrote the above so I\'ll leave it there, but I decided to double check. I usually refer to https://busybox.net/BusyBox.html as a single page reference to the builtins and shuf isn\'t listed but /usr/bin/shuf is indeed a symlink to /bin/busybox on one of my Alpine devices, which is a little annoying. When I work on a script like this one, I usually do it on my laptop that has all the full tools on it but I double check against the busybox page to make sure I\'m not using a command or an option to a command that busybox doesn\'t support. Then I test it on one of the devices.','2020-03-05 08:00:11'),
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(2868,3024,'2020-03-05 08:11:40','tuturto','great storytelling','I loved the storytelling in this one and use of sound effects. Really made my morning.','2020-03-05 08:14:27'),
|
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(2869,3023,'2020-03-05 10:03:34','nobody','Re: Re:','To see what tools your Busybox come with you should run it without options. Busybox is quite configurable so you should check documentation generated with the same configuration as your target. That web page is either very outdated or generated from some sample configuration.\r\n\r\nBesides, ash also has $RANDOM so using AWK isn\'t really necessary:\r\n\r\necho $((RANDOM%firstnames_len))\r\n\r\nHere is also a fix for Dave\'s suggestion:\r\n\r\ni=1; for name in A B C; do echo \"$((i++)): $name\"; done\r\n\r\nAnd if you use preincrement the i=1 is also unnecessary:\r\n\r\nfor name in A B C; do echo \"$((++i)): $name\"; done','2020-03-05 10:15:05'),
|
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(2870,3009,'2020-03-05 10:51:25','bittin','yay','Hello!\r\n\r\nHeard Chris Zimmermann talking about LBW in FLOSS Weekly and mentioned your podcast also was an old Outlaws listener, so started listening to your new Inlaws show now today :)\r\n\r\nseems nice so far only listened 20 minutes','2020-03-05 10:55:08'),
|
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(2871,3023,'2020-03-05 12:02:25','nobody','Standalone increment in ash','Also if you want the ((i++)) increment for ash you could pretty easily replicate it with:\r\n\r\n: $((i++))','2020-03-05 13:46:56'),
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(2872,3023,'2020-03-05 12:32:11','Carl','Neat','> echo $((RANDOM%firstnames_len))\r\nThat\'s neat. The first time I tried it though I got the same number twice in a row:\r\nm300-01:/srv$ echo $((RANDOM%100))\r\n88\r\nm300-01:/srv$ echo $((RANDOM%100))\r\n88\r\nm300-01:/srv$ echo $((RANDOM%100))\r\n68\r\n\r\nProbably just a fluke but I\'d be interested to test it in rapid succession (eg. a loop) to see if it\'s more prone to do that than the awk random number generator.\r\n\r\nTo be clear, you\'re not suggesting the pre/post increments work on busybox/ash correct - they don\'t appear to unless I\'m doing it wrong:\r\n\r\n-ash: arithmetic syntax error','2020-03-05 13:46:56'),
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(2873,3023,'2020-03-05 16:30:40','nobody','$(())','>to see if it\'s more prone to do that than the awk random number generator\r\nI doubt there is any significant difference. Certainly not any that would matter for a project like this.\r\n\r\n>To be clear, you\'re not suggesting the pre/post increments work on busybox/ash correct - they don\'t appear to unless I\'m doing it wrong:\r\nI just threw up a Alpine container and at least there it works just fine. What command did you run that produced this error message?','2020-03-05 16:48:49'),
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(2874,3019,'2020-03-05 17:19:44','ClaudioM','FLOSS Weekly #568','Thanks to these episodes, I realized that Chris Zimmerman was also interviewed on FLOSS Weekly #568 where he talks about Linux Bier Wanderung. I thought the voice sounded familiar, so I had to do some research, and yes, it\'s the same Chris from Linux Inlaws. :-)\r\n\r\nhttps://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly/episodes/568','2020-03-05 18:09:17'),
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(2875,3023,'2020-03-05 21:11:58','Carl','Version 3','@nobody, not sure what I did earlier to produce that arithmetic error, I just tried it again and your examples are working. Sorry about that.\r\n\r\nI just did a third version:\r\nhttps://www.sodface.com/misc/qots-crew-gen3\r\n\r\nGreatly simplified, no loops and just using shuf repeatedly per nobody\'s example to get the first and last name.\r\n\r\nhttps://pastebin.com/iaXw9ZL2\r\n\r\nThanks to both Dave and nobody for the feedback.','2022-02-14 13:25:13'),
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(2876,3024,'2020-03-07 09:40:35','MrX','Re great storytelling','Hi tuturto\r\nMany thanks for the kind words, glad you enjoyed the episode it certainly had us stumped when it happened.\r\n\r\nAll the best \r\nMrX','2020-03-07 09:44:38'),
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(2877,3025,'2020-03-09 07:51:28','Ken Fallon','I disagree','Hi Ahuka,\r\n\r\nAs you know I am enjoying the series.\r\n\r\nI don\'t think that charging for messaging, however small is the answer. It is socially unfair as it imposes a financial barrier that many may not be able to afford. To quote my mother, \"It\'s not a lot to have, but it\'s a lot to want\". I had to send 100 applications before I got my first job, that would amount to $1 in your proposal. Now put that into context when your income is $41/month, and you see it excludes the poorest nations.\r\nhttps://www.worlddata.info/average-income.php\r\n\r\nIn any event it was tried with email back in the 1990/2000\'s and failed.\r\nhttps://www.geek.com/news/yahoo-introduces-paid-for-e-mail-service-called-centmail-872762/\r\n\r\nHowever it didn\'t stop companies in using the idea for profit.\r\nhttps://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2006/02/aol-yahoo-and-goodmail-taxing-your-email-fun-and-profit\r\n\r\nI also have concerns on any solution that requires a verified identity in order to participate. As soon as you do, you stop been federated, and start been walled gardens. Not to mention the registration process that would be needed, and then would need to be taxed, and surely limited to authorized providers, etc etc.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad of the chance to think about this, so please keep them coming.','2020-03-09 07:53:54'),
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(2878,3025,'2020-03-09 15:23:33','Ahuka','Further discussion','To place Serge\'s ideas in context, it should be pointed out first that he intended that the price paid on en e-mail would go to the recipient, which is why he said it would be a wash for most people. As a recovering economist, I do believe that anything that is provided with no charge at all is likely to be abused, and that is what we are talking about. And it is also worth noting that Serge\'s proposal about charging was a way to get around the only other feasible way to control abuse, which is to sharply limit who can send messages. I can, right now, write a rule that says anyone not already in my address book cannot successfully send me e-mail. I just delete on sight any e-mail from someone not in the book.','2020-03-09 16:03:33'),
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(2879,3028,'2020-03-11 07:32:53','tuturto','welcome!','Welcome and thanks for the great first show!\r\n\r\nYou jumped directly to the deep end with a show about monads and category theory. When I saw it on the queue, I wanted to listen to it immediately. Instead I sawed it for the morning walk today so I could concentrate to it properly.','2020-03-11 08:23:20'),
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(2880,3028,'2020-03-11 10:34:52','crvs','Re: welcome!','Thank you, I\'m glad you enjoyed it!\r\nI hope I was clear enough and not too rambly. I didn\'t go into the monad laws because it was already difficult enough to be somewhat coherent :)','2020-03-11 10:39:47'),
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(2881,3034,'2020-03-22 19:47:07','Klaatu','Did not know this','Thanks for the info Thaj. I didn\'t know how to do this, but now I do. I can now be both klaatu and notklaatu on Matrix, and that\'s pretty satisfying.','2020-03-22 19:58:31'),
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(2882,3031,'2020-03-22 20:07:41','Klaatu','History','It\'s fascinating to hear about the \"early\" Internet and Internet commerce. Thank you for sharing this history.','2020-03-22 20:10:04'),
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(2883,3026,'2020-03-25 18:37:18','Windigo','Great episode','My partner uses hex bug (or similar) robots in her STEAM lessons (STEAM being an acronym for science, tech, engineering, art, and math), but I\'d never heard of battle bots. They sound like loads of fun!\r\n\r\nPlease keep the episodes coming. You have a knack for doing episodes that exemplify the hacker ethos, while being fun and unique!','2020-03-25 19:39:47'),
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(2884,3032,'2020-03-26 22:48:33','Windigo','Minimal distros are the best','I\'ve tried out TinyCore a few times over the years, but had no idea they made a RaspberryPi edition. What a pleasant surprise!','2020-03-26 22:56:03'),
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(2885,3043,'2020-04-02 10:53:24','thelovebug','Bass and Treble','Thanks for this episode, I love hearing how people record shows... I might have to do one of these myself!\r\n\r\nI\'m curious as to why you attenuate the bass and treble by 6dB? The final episode has a telephone-y feel to it. \r\n\r\nWould it be possible to get hold of the original file before it\'s processed?','2020-04-02 11:03:52'),
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(2886,3027,'2020-04-04 05:32:44','Mongo','very interesting talk','It wasn\'t enough information for me to build my own quantum computer, but I did find it interesting. Looking forward to episode two.','2020-04-04 09:05:32'),
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(2887,3053,'2020-04-08 07:07:38','lostnbronx','Welcom back to the Audio Book Club!','Really great to hear you guys once again! The \"HPR Audio Book Club\" has been missed. Free culture audiobook reviews live!','2020-04-08 07:53:21'),
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(2888,3048,'2020-04-08 15:06:31','mcnalu','The affected episode','Toilet paper really is an odd invention. I believe there was a time when it was first marketed that the public thought it vaguely disgusting, and as you suggest, an unnecessary luxury.\r\n\r\nOne plausible explanation for the surge in toilet paper purchase is that in countries experiencing some form of lock down, more people work at home hence the demand from toilet paper moves from office wholesalers to retail shops and the supply chain takes time to adapt. In the mean time shelves will be empty.\r\n\r\nThere\'s a ruined Roman bath house near me situated on the Antonine Wall (Scotland). It has a latrine and evidence suggests they used moss to clean regio affectus.','2020-04-08 15:36:27'),
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(2889,3048,'2020-04-09 11:31:08','Bookewyrmm','A word of caution','I am not a health care worker, nor do I play one on TV. However I have worked in health care IT for 10 years. The word of caution I would inject, is in regards to the option of using a bare hand to clean the affected area. I would say this is a last resort substitute, due to the potential health risks associated with it. Hepatitis A is spread through fecal matter in food. If one is not supremely carefully, ie: wash thoroughly ( more than a minute) and then sanitize, you can spread Hep A to your self and your loved ones very easily. \r\n\r\nFortunately, Hep A is not fatal, mostly just uncomfortable, with a mild fever that passes and diarrhea for up to 30 days or so.','2020-04-09 11:33:28'),
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(2890,3050,'2020-04-10 14:53:52','Ahuka','Great sketch!','I loved the sketch at the end. It was very funny, and very creative.','2020-04-10 14:56:26'),
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(2891,3034,'2020-04-12 10:46:43','clacke','appservice-irc','Oh cool!\r\n\r\nWhen I was using Matrix+IRC before, unauthenticated FreeNode was still ok, but now I know what to do if I start using Matrix again.\r\n\r\nI have been using XMPP and Biboumi, but didn\'t host my own and the hosted ones have not been reliable. I miss IRC, so I may come back to Matrix soon.','2020-04-12 10:48:54'),
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(2892,3051,'2020-04-14 22:46:01','brian in ohio','electoral college','Its hard to believe a guy from Indiana would advocate for the elimination of the electoral college. You definitely would not need to vote if you live in Indiana if there was no electoral college. The US is not a democracy, its a republic big difference. The primaries and caucus system is a political party system and should not be confused with how Presidents are elected. One last thing health insurance is not health care. When you say universal health care your really saying universal health insurance. You still will have to fight an insurance company with \"universal health care\". Send Lawyers, guns and money the sh-- has hit the fan!\r\ngood show entertaining','2020-04-14 23:43:10'),
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(2893,3032,'2020-04-15 14:57:58','clacke','Re: Tiny Core maintainer name','I have never used Tiny Core Linux, but years of listening to ... Linux Outlaws probably? ... have still taught me the name of its maintainer by heart, because it\'s the most Bond Villain maintainer name ever.\r\n\r\n*Sean Connery voice*\r\n\r\nSHINGLEDECKER!!','2020-04-15 15:11:56'),
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(2894,3046,'2020-04-17 17:50:03','clacke','First-class ranting','Thank you Ken for a forceful and enlightened rant on the archiving mentality, the evergreen value of much knowledge, and the need for self-contained show material. I agreed with not only the general sentiment, but probably with every word said.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad you don\'t believe in editing things down.','2020-04-17 18:11:55'),
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(2895,3032,'2020-04-18 09:08:30','clacke','Ridiculously tiny really','On a more relevant note: I love these minimalist approaches. A friend swears by Porteus, but that\'s still 300 MB. Tiny by most standards, but wouldn\'t fit on your card.\r\n\r\nI think it\'s worth mentioning that while you said it left a few megabytes on your card, the core of Core is a mere 11 MB. He tried for the longest time to keep it below 10 MB, but had to break the barrier about 10 years ago.\r\n\r\nIt\'s still the only distro that fits in an email. :-)\r\n\r\nHadn\'t heard of NanoBSD before, thanks for bringing it up.','2020-04-18 09:11:01'),
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(2896,3054,'2020-04-18 12:45:07','brian in ohio','politics','Its a shame that ahuka takes a decent look at the pandemic and has to drag his form of left wing politics in to it. Ad hominem attacks make you feel good but don\'t add to the strength of your argument. As far as Chloroquine and its possible usefulness in helping people recover from this disease here is a link to a National Institute of health article about this drug https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1232869/ dated 2005. This drug may be useful but peoples politics are getting in the way of seeing that. Who\'s rational. Lastly its easy for pensioners to say stay at home indefinitely, some of us need to go out and work there are many jobs you can\'t do from the comfort of your home in your pajamas. Poverty is a bigger killer than any pandemic','2020-04-18 13:12:49'),
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(2897,3056,'2020-04-20 14:46:36','Ahuka','Very timely','I was thinking about checking out jitsi, so this was a welcome find in my feed. Thanks for doing this.','2020-04-20 14:48:23'),
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(2898,3056,'2020-04-21 03:35:59','harvhat','Why talk about Jitsi','I was wondering if I am expected to listen to a podcast if the first minute or so is the presenter explaining how they don\'t know much about the what they are about to talk about?\r\n\r\nSeems the listeners time isn\'t being respected.','2020-04-21 08:54:54'),
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(2899,3048,'2020-04-21 04:54:35','tuturto','Speaking of romans','Romans also used tersorium or xylospongium, which is sea sponge tied on a stick. Those were in communal use and just rinsed in a bucket of water and vinegar in between of uses.\r\n\r\nAlso, a big portion of humanity uses hands (or rather a hand and water) to clean themselves and actually consider using toilet paper disgusting as it can\'t clean as well as water can. Different cultures and all that.','2020-04-21 08:54:54'),
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(2900,3056,'2020-04-21 06:06:22','justme','I really enjoyed this episode','As Jitsi seems to be making the rounds coming out on top as the open source alternative to ZOOM this was really interesting and made me want to play around with it.\r\n\r\nThank you very much','2020-04-21 08:54:54'),
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(2901,3056,'2020-04-21 10:07:34','Mike Ray','Re: Why talk about jitsi?','To the person moaning about \'having\' to listen to, or \'being expected\' to listen to, a podcast about jitsi in which the host first says he doesn\'t know a lot about jitsi.\r\n\r\nI think HPR might not be what you are looking for.\r\n\r\nAnd you need to learn where the delete or skip button is.\r\n\r\nIn the few shows I have done for HPR, I have always been very conscious that there are, inevitably, people out there who know more than I do about what I am talking about.\r\n\r\nWhy don\'t you do a show about something and show us all just how smart you are?','2020-04-21 10:33:08'),
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(2902,3052,'2020-04-22 11:05:47','Dave Morriss','Very useful, thanks','Thanks for this. I have struggled to find devices on my network in the past, and eventually resorted to using nmap (which I used to use at work years ago).\r\n\r\nI was not aware of arp-scan, and have just installed it. It\'s very much more helpful when searching for that new Pi just added to the network.\r\n\r\nI\'d not noticed before that \"Raspberry Pi Foundation\" had become \"Raspberry Pi Trading Ltd\" apparently with the arrival of the Pi 4, and that the MAC address base had changed then too.\r\n\r\nDave','2020-04-22 11:16:26'),
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(2903,3054,'2020-04-23 07:59:21','Telford Tendys','Freedom, Governance and Pandemic','I prefer free software because I like the freedom to do the things I want to do and live the life I want to live. Here\'s an excellent podcast discussion of these rather difficult questions.\r\n\r\nhttps://powerhour.alexepstein.com/2020/04/23/power-hour-4-22-20-onkar-ghate-on-a-more-american-approach-to-covid-19/\r\n\r\nYou can download and listen without copy protection and there are no advertisements, however be aware that the above podcast is NOT under CC license, but linking should be fine. They take a somewhat hyper-rational approach to the issues, and some people might prefer an emotional perspective, but even if you disagree with their conclusions at least consider the way they methodically work through the key points.\r\n\r\nEconomics is about deciding the allocation of precious scarce resources, and inevitably this must involve a trade-off - very similar to Engineering. What is happening right now is that the lives and livelihoods of young people are being sliced away for the benefit of the older demographic. Despite this ethical dilemma, very few of the commentators are willing to even give the slightest recognition of those being sacrificed. Only those people who start with the understanding that a trade-off is involved are genuinely engaging with the problem.','2020-04-23 09:19:54'),
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(2904,3056,'2020-04-23 12:02:06','Ahuka','Why listen?','Why indeed should anyone listen to an episode of HPR? The only answer I have is because it is of interest to you. I think of HPR as a party with a bunch of friends, not as a college curriculum. I listen to the ones I want to listen to, I skip the ones I don\'t. And I am not in the least bothered to think that there are people out there who don\'t want to listen to my shows.','2020-04-23 12:03:50'),
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(2905,3056,'2020-04-23 12:18:42','Mike Ray','Re: Why listen?','These days I probably only listen to about ten percent of episodes.\r\n\r\nI don\'t know why this is compared to the near 100% I listened to when I first found HPR. It is probably because I arrived at a peak, right slap in the middle of the legendary Ahuka Libra Office series exactly when I needed a leg up doing spreadsheets.\r\n\r\nAnd also around that time Klaatu and Dave were doing a lot more.\r\n\r\nBut at no time have I complained about any episode.\r\n\r\nMy mother used to tell us, if you can\'t say anything nice, keep your mouth shut.\r\n\r\nAnd nowadays I don\'t do any podcasts here because I have become too conscious that there will be listeners who know more about what I am talking about than I do.\r\n\r\nBut comments like the one criticising Operat0r for starting his cast by saying he knows little about the subject is not exactly encouraging to others, is it?','2020-04-23 12:20:40'),
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(2906,3054,'2020-04-24 00:48:30','brian in ohio','clarification','Chloroquine is different from Hydroxychloroquine, my mistake. There are medicines that can help peoples own immune system get the through this (and many other diseases). Waiting for a vaccine is untenable for us all, we will all end up in the economic toilet, herd immunity is what we need, lets get going. (unless your at risk, hang back, 6 feet or 2 meters, and let the \'risk\' takers get out there and pick up the pieces.','2020-04-24 06:39:03'),
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(2907,3054,'2020-04-24 12:48:47','Ahuka','Herd immunity','Herd immunity is wonderful, and it is why vaccination is so important. When we have a vaccine (and the most common estimate I have seen is 18 months on that one), and when we ramp up production and get it out to over 300 million Americans, we\'ll be in a much better place.','2020-04-24 13:10:42'),
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(2908,3056,'2020-04-30 06:36:08','crvs','Re: Why listen?','Because by telling you that he doesn\'t know much about Jitsi operat0r has just invited you or anyone else out there to do a follow up show if you happen to know more.','2020-04-30 08:42:46'),
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(2909,3072,'2020-04-30 17:56:07','clacke','Errata: Ubuntu Python virtualenv works just fine','I confused myself and created a Nix Python virtualenv (which doesn\'t work) when I thought I was creating an Ubuntu Python virtualenv (which actually does work).','2020-04-30 17:59:11'),
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(2910,3059,'2020-05-01 03:16:39','Windigo','Thanks for the introduction','This sounds like very useful software; thanks for the introductory episode!','2020-05-01 08:35:31'),
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(2911,3075,'2020-05-01 11:01:51','clacke','Federated link for talk on federated things','In addition to the archive.org location above, the talk is also available on the federated free social web at https://conf.tube/videos/watch/c81c92cd-b023-4a32-966c-bb2233e35483 .','2020-05-01 11:05:02'),
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(2912,3065,'2020-05-01 19:41:06','brian in ohio','enemies','Its sad that ahuka considers his fellow citizen on the other side of the political spectrum his enemies. Also, all governments, not just russia, sow political discord for their gain, just listen to voice of america and check out all the cia ops in central and south america. Quit picking on russia as a straw man.','2020-05-01 19:45:45'),
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(2913,3066,'2020-05-04 07:48:42','tuturto','Thanks','Thanks for keeping flag of Hacker Public Radio high up and doing the community episode all by yourself. Listening to recap of whole previous month worth of episodes is one of those things that I look forward when a new month starts.','2020-05-04 08:19:47'),
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(2914,3063,'2020-05-05 10:08:51','Archer72','Fountain pens','This episode leaves me wishing I were a writer/artist. It is an interesting medium that my daughter (an artist) may take up, since she had been sketching pen drawings lately.','2020-05-05 11:21:48'),
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(2915,3066,'2020-05-05 17:10:37','Dave Morriss','No problem','I appreciate the feedback, tuturto. I also feel the Community News is an important part of HPR, and the show must go on as they say!','2020-05-05 17:11:42'),
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(2916,3066,'2020-05-06 01:07:45','clacke','Blood type distribution','Dave mentioned in passing that 0+ would be an unusual blood type.\r\n\r\nOne might think so when just looking at how the alleles work. All you need is one A or one B allele and then the 0+ would be overruled. One might be tempted to believe that it\'s 25% each of 0, A, B and AB. But that assumes an even distribution of genes.\r\n\r\nMy blood type is A+, and I grew up being taught it was the most common one. When I moved to Hong Kong I learned that blood type distribution is not universal. Someone told me my blood type was \"unusual\".\r\n\r\nWhile A+ is not exactly unusual, in China (and I assume HK) near 50% of the population is 0+, while A+ is at around 25%.\r\n\r\nIt\'s also not as dominant in Sweden as I was led to believe. 37% of Swedes are A+ while 32% are 0+.\r\n\r\nIn the UK and US, 0+ is somewhat more common than A+, the reverse of the Swedish distribution.\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type_distribution_by_country','2020-05-06 08:03:34'),
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(2917,3066,'2020-05-06 12:24:39','Ahuka','I loved the show','You did a good job, Dave. Though I am guessing you would like to have Ken back next time!','2020-05-06 12:26:26'),
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(2918,3066,'2020-05-06 13:12:48','Dave Morriss','Re: Blood type distribution','Thanks clacke.\r\n\r\nI think I was confusing \"I have learnt this stuff\" with \"I know about this stuff\" and got a bit muddled! Now I think of it, I was learning about blood groups more than 50 years ago!\r\n\r\nIt\'s an interesting subject though and I must go and refresh my dwindling/dwindled knowledge about it all.','2020-05-06 13:18:03'),
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(2919,3066,'2020-05-06 13:16:13','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ahuka','I\'m glad you enjoyed the show.\r\n\r\nIn having run through it earlier, when Mumble refused to record anything for me, I obviously gave myself an accidental rehearsal, so maybe the show wasn\'t as disjointed as it could have been :-)\r\n\r\nYes, it\'s more fun when there are two of us to discuss and banter a bit, so I prefer the normal setup.','2020-05-06 13:22:18'),
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(2920,3063,'2020-05-07 14:23:27','Bookewyrmm','Pens, ink and paper','Dave, my apologies for the late comment, I had intended to get it in prior to the community news, but, life happens.\r\n\r\nI too have always been fascinated by these tools. My fascination was multiplied by both of my parents working in parallel industries when I was young. My father worked in an art and drafting supply house, my mother in an office supplies store.\r\n\r\nInstead of turning to fountain pens, my disposition is toward ball point pens. While I do agree that they aren\'t the greatest writing tools, I have leaned toward advertising pieces and novelty pens. I have pens in my collection from as early as the 1950s and 60s. Mostly local business advertising, a few national chains/brand names. \r\n\r\nArt class in middle school introduced me to papers and textures and artisan papers. I am a proud owner of a 100% hand made journal. (Not by me, I don\'t have that level of skill) the 300 pages of paper is all hand made from recycled cardboard and denim an the entire volume is bound in hand tooled leather. It is so nice, I am scared to write in it...lol','2020-05-07 14:28:23'),
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(2921,3063,'2020-05-07 20:31:50','Dave Morriss','To Archer72','Hi. Thanks for the comment.\r\n\r\nI know what you mean; I\'m no artist myself. My daughter took art and science at school and has developed her art skills since then. She always tells me to just keep sketching if I want to get better at it. That\'s what she has done to try to get to a place where she can start to combine her science interests with her art.\r\n\r\nI guess the message is that you can develop abilities if you keep trying!','2020-05-07 20:45:47'),
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(2922,3063,'2020-05-07 20:45:02','Dave Morriss','To Bookewyrmm','Thanks for the comment; it\'s much appreciated.\r\n\r\nMy interest in fountain pens didn\'t really develop until I was beyond school age. School had the effect of making me dislike using them because I was forced to do so. I have been a frequent ballpoint pen user from my university student days, because it was easier to write rapidly with one when in lectures or other places where rapid transcription was needed.\r\n\r\nI can see how an interest in the older 1950/1960 designs of ballpoint pens would be a thing. Quite collectable!\r\n\r\nYour hand-made journal sounds wonderful, with the leather cover too! I have never owned anything so good, but I do have some notebooks that I like so much I have never used them and probably never will! Your reaction to your journal is perfectly understandable.\r\n\r\nI\'d like to hear more about the pen collection and the journal if you feel you could make a show about them :-)','2020-05-07 20:45:47'),
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(2923,3072,'2020-05-12 07:03:12','tuturto','Interesting and insightful','It\'s been awhile since I needed to do Python package management, but thanks to this episode I\'m ready next time the need arises.','2020-05-12 07:25:01'),
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(2924,3069,'2020-05-12 19:09:50','Bendy','skynet','Wow! I didn\'t realise skynet was really nvidia. I\'m going to bin my graphics card right now. Thank you so much for this heads-up!!!','2020-05-12 19:48:30'),
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(2925,3073,'2020-05-13 06:59:13','tuturto','sounds good','Looking forward the series!\r\nI haven\'t ever stripped Matchbox cars, but I have done fair share of miniature stripping. I\'m interested on hearing how you handle this as these models have both metal and plastic parts.','2020-05-13 08:08:17'),
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(2926,3073,'2020-05-14 20:51:16','Tony Hughes','Feedback from Tuturto','Thanks for the comments, I will be covering how I go about dismantling the models, removing paint from the casting and plastic parts as part of the series. My next episode will be about the basic tools and materials you need to get started.','2020-05-14 21:01:53'),
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(2927,3077,'2020-05-19 11:03:50','Ken Fallon','Brilliant Idea','I may just try this. I\'ll probably use different parts.','2020-05-19 11:05:21'),
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(2928,3077,'2020-05-19 18:26:02','jezra','an amazing mix of custom hardware and software','Thank you for sharing. I have now fallen down a rabbit hole of links to software I didn\'t know I needed. :)','2020-05-19 18:28:54'),
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(2929,3078,'2020-05-22 02:47:21','Zen_floater2','my magical forrest Atheist comments.','https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FG6yodWq9OU\r\n\r\nCapitalsm is successful as it models natures \"kill or be killed\" ethic at a conscious level. \r\n\r\nIn short, YES, your going to get out there and your going to die. \r\nThe problem was in allowing China into this \"GLOBAL\" community, not whether or not your going to hide in your house...','2020-05-22 08:19:42'),
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(2930,3071,'2020-05-22 11:32:23','nobody','Further simplifying','There are actually more than two types of quoting in bash. In addition to \'single\' and \"double there are also $\'ANSI-C\' and $\"localized\" quotations. For this problem I would have used the $\'ANSI-C\' quotation:\r\nalias show_network=$\'nmap -sn 192.168.0.0/24 | awk \'/^Nmap scan report/{print \"\"; print; next}{print}\'\'\r\n\r\nPersonally I find this a bit more readable. It might not be as portable but that shouldn\'t matter as the episode specifically addresses Bash.\r\n\r\nHere are the expansions for the ANSI-C quotation in the Bash manual:\r\nhttps://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/ANSI_002dC-Quoting.html','2020-05-22 11:36:04'),
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(2931,3013,'2020-05-22 11:36:56','nobody','awk','Personally I feel like the best and most complete resource for learning AWK is the gawk manual:\r\nhttps://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/gawk.html','2020-05-22 11:40:51'),
|
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(2932,3071,'2020-05-22 16:44:12','Dave Morriss','To \'nobody\' re ANSI-C quoting','Thanks for this.\r\n\r\nYou are of course perfectly right. I tend not to think of this way of doing things - maybe because I originally learned Unix on HP-UX and SunOS a long time ago. I might be accused of being a little stuck in my ways!\r\n\r\nI did think of mentioning this in the show but didn\'t do it because it was a \"snippet\" and I didn\'t want to go into too much detail and make the episode too long. I did link to the relevant page in the documentation (https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Quoting.html) however.\r\n\r\nFeel free to add to the Bash Scripting series yourself. I look forward to hearing a different view from you in due course.','2020-05-22 16:46:25'),
|
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(2933,3013,'2020-05-22 21:40:04','Dave Morriss','Response to \'nobody\' re awk','Thank you for your feedback. If I interpret you correctly I think you may have misunderstood the spirit of my earlier comment.\r\n\r\nI was replying to crvs when he mentioned the use of shebangs in the context of writing awk scripts. I took him to mean that this particular episode had helped to provide an insight which assisted with his understanding.\r\n\r\nIn my reply I pointed to the series that b-yeezi and I had done on awk where we\'d tried to introduce people to this tool and had made many many references to the gawk manual along the way of course.\r\n\r\nThere is no contest with the gawk manual itself, if that is what you were implying. The manual is obviously the most comprehensive and definitive resource on the utility and the language. The resource which b-yeezi and I had tried to provide was simply a way into concepts which may have been daunting and somewhat inaccessible to some.\r\n\r\nOur role was one of supplementing the manual itself, not of superseding it in any way.\r\n\r\nI hope this clarifies any misunderstanding there may have been.','2020-05-22 21:42:49'),
|
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(2934,3093,'2020-05-27 14:47:51','monochromec','The review of the review','Thanks for the valuable feedback Claudio! We\'ll tackle this as part of a future episode.','2020-05-27 14:51:22'),
|
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(2935,3053,'2020-05-28 01:42:48','mordancy','Blood Witness','I love this book and can\'t wait to listen to this episode. Dave Hitt is amazing and has other stuff to listen to. \r\n\r\nVisit his website for more stuff: https://www.davehitt.com/podcasts/. \r\n\r\nWhile I agree with most of his opinions and information, there have been a few things I absolutely disagree with him about, but I get to hear a different point of view sometime and','2022-02-14 13:25:13'),
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(2936,3084,'2020-05-28 19:21:35','Ahuka','Missing Fifty','Hearing Fifty made me miss him again. And I must admit I was surprised to discover that I appeared in this episode. But good work on the reviews folks.','2020-05-28 19:33:53'),
|
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|
(2937,3083,'2020-05-29 09:40:26','DanNixon','Groove based tape format','Is the audio format you referred to the Tefifon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tefifon)?\r\n\r\nNever seen one in person but there is a good overview of it over on Techmoan\'s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBNTAmLRmUg','2020-05-29 09:43:44'),
|
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(2938,3083,'2020-05-31 10:50:15','MrX','Re Groove based tape format','Hi Dan yes you are quite correct it was indeed the Tefifon, I couldn\'t remember its name. It certainly is a very strange device. The one they had at the museum of communication wasn\'t in working condition at the time, they were in the process of trying to repair it I hope they succeeded. I must thank you for bringing this up as I really enjoyed rewatching the YouTube video link you gave which gives an excellent introduction of the device. The sound quality seemed surprisingly good. I watched the video while sitting out in the sun in my back garden. All the best MrX','2020-05-31 11:13:24'),
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(2939,3082,'2020-06-02 00:52:51','clacke','Atom \"tombstones\" RFC','fluffy mentioned Atom \"tombstones\", defined in \'The Atom \"deleted-entry\" Element\', https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6721','2020-06-02 08:08:37'),
|
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|
(2940,3072,'2020-06-02 09:10:54','clacke','The joy is real','I have been using pyenv-virtualenv for a month now, and I am reminded every day of how happy I am to never be running another `pipenv run` or `pipenv shell` ever again.','2020-06-02 09:15:01'),
|
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|
(2941,3087,'2020-06-02 21:56:34','crvs','you forgot november','so in the end i finally got the chorus of that one bloodhound gang song for which this episode is relevant. nice!','2020-06-02 21:59:04'),
|
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|
(2942,3083,'2020-06-03 22:03:05','Windigo','Modern Sheevaplug support','Dave, I hope you\'ll be excited to hear that the Sheevaplug is still very well supported by Debian. I had one up-and-running with the latest version until very recently.\r\n\r\nHere\'s a resource I used to set mine up: https://www.cyrius.com/debian/kirkwood/sheevaplug/\r\n\r\nI have a hard time justifying keeping mine running, what with the Raspberry Pi and others being so much more full-featured and powerful, but it\'s definitely an interesting piece of hardware!','2022-02-14 13:25:14'),
|
||
|
(2943,3083,'2020-06-04 09:11:51','Dave Morriss','Re: Modern Sheevaplug support','Hi Windigo!\r\n\r\nThanks for the link. I\'d love to get my old Sheevaplug up and running again, and this looks like the site to help me do so.\r\n\r\nI don\'t actually have a use for it at the moment. It had a USB disk on it and I used to use it as a Git repo (a package called \'Gitosis\' I think), and could access it when away from home. Then it was a \"playground\" for learning about Bind. Then the disk crashed!\r\n\r\nAnyway, this is now on my to-do list. Thank you!\r\n\r\nDave','2020-06-04 09:13:27'),
|
||
|
(2944,3090,'2020-06-05 05:25:56','b-yeezi','Thanks for reminding me','Good episode. Thanks for reminding me that I know nothing about networking.','2020-06-05 08:13:10'),
|
||
|
(2945,3090,'2020-06-08 04:33:27','cmhobbs','quality episode','Really enjoyed this one. Found myself nodding along in agreement and finishing some of your sentences. Lots of good refresher and some new tips in here for me. Thanks a ton for submitting this one!','2020-06-08 08:04:10'),
|
||
|
(2946,3091,'2020-06-08 21:57:57','norrist','read only router','The idea of running your home router off a read only filesystem is very interesting.','2020-06-09 09:59:40'),
|
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|
(2947,3094,'2020-06-11 00:14:33','cmhobbs','great keyboard','I\'ve been using a Kinesis Advantage for years. Owner of two and I love them. They\'ve helped with my RSI quite a lot.\r\n\r\nCouple of notes: the esc (and fn keys) are membrane, i\'m pretty sure. One can also program the keyboard to beep on all key-presses which is useful to avoid bottoming out.\r\n\r\nI agree with your two week skill acquisition time with the keyboard. I find that many years later I still want to use the advantage +/= and ~ locations on any other keyboard.\r\n\r\nThanks for sharing this one!','2020-06-11 08:38:36'),
|
||
|
(2948,3091,'2020-06-11 14:14:26','lZen_Floater1','READ ONLY ROOTS','You can set up Fuguita via OpenBSD to actually lock all root access writes OFF. In this case, the filesystem is read into memory on boot, then that filesystem is locked down for the duration. No one can make any changes to the system from that point forward. It could be run in QEMU and even lock down what drives could be accessed with the dd command as well. This makes any kind of attack, absolutely impossible.','2020-06-11 14:22:06'),
|
||
|
(2949,3056,'2020-06-13 05:51:01','operat0r','dERp','forgot show notes ..\r\n\r\nJitsi\r\n\r\nsystemctl stop docker\r\n\r\nrm -Rf /var/lib/docker\r\nrm -Rf ~/.jitsi-meet-cfg\r\n\r\n\r\n# change docker-data to your path you want to put images in \r\nmount --rbind /media/moredata/docker-data /var/lib/docker\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\napt-get remove --purge install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io\r\n\r\n\r\napt-get install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\ncurl -L \"https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.23.1/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)\" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose\r\nchmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\ngit clone https://github.com/jitsi/docker-jitsi-meet && cd docker-jitsi-meet\r\n\r\n\r\nsystemctl restart docker\r\n\r\ncp env.example .env\r\nmkdir -p ~/.jitsi-meet-cfg/{web/letsencrypt,transcripts,prosody,jicofo,jvb}\r\n\r\ndocker-compose --log-level DEBUG up -d --force-recreate --remove-orphans \r\n\r\n\r\ntail -f `find /var/lib/docker/containers -iname \"*.log\" `\r\n\r\n\r\ndocker container ls\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\ndocker exec -it d4c89a799fd7 bash\r\n\r\n\r\n# side that will be controlled needs to run\r\nhttps://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet-electron/releases/latest','2020-06-13 08:33:15'),
|
||
|
(2950,3095,'2020-06-14 20:50:35','brian-in-ohio','the gimp','Great show! My wife and I are avid bird watchers and this year I added taking pictures of them (the birds) to the mix and I\'ve wanted to process some of those photos and often thought of the gimp. Looking forward to more tutorials, if they\'re half as good as the libre office set they\'ll be awesome. Thanks for the show.','2020-06-14 21:07:00'),
|
||
|
(2951,3095,'2020-06-14 21:16:05','Ahuka','I\'m glad it helped','I\'m glad you liked it. I have one more already uploaded and in the queue, and I just finished writing a third one. So there is more to come.','2020-06-14 21:25:17'),
|
||
|
(2952,3079,'2020-06-15 00:08:28','frank','The sketch','Sorry to say, but I found the sketch not funny at all. Not because I’m a trump supporter (far from it), but it just was not funny in a comical sense. It gave me a sense of „fremdschämen“ and I had to skip over it after listening to the first minute or so.\r\n\r\nPlease also work on your audio balancing. First there was low-volume talk, then suddenly a much louder techno jingle (right before the sketch).','2020-06-15 07:47:43'),
|
||
|
(2953,3096,'2020-06-17 14:35:16','Mike Brehm','Productive walk','It\'s been at least 15 years since I attempted to pick all of the parts and build my own PC, but after hearing your talk I think I may give it another try. \r\nThank you for the inspiration.','2020-06-17 14:38:53'),
|
||
|
(2954,3099,'2020-06-18 13:23:19','ClaudioM','All According to Plan! }:-)','You *really* thought I wouldn\'t have done my research before recording??\r\n\r\n**FOOLS!!** Mwahahahaa....\r\n\r\nI had already found out about the new pricing scheme from an inside source in the deep web way before my review, and given the changes and all the red tape usually involved with such things, I knew it was worth putting that information out there for humankind to behold.\r\n\r\nAnd since your assumption of my lineage was an extra benefit (I\'m not Italian), I can now leak this cable from the \"Fratellanza di Correzioni\"...\r\n\r\nhttps://www.kevra.org/TheBestOfNext/DifferentNeXTSpellings/DifferentNeXTSpellings.html\r\n\r\nHACK THE PLANET!! THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE!! I WANT TO BELIEVE!!1\r\n\r\n(Thanks for the recursively recursive review. My skin is pretty thick. ;-) )','2022-02-14 13:25:14'),
|
||
|
(2955,3100,'2020-06-19 16:30:01','brian-in-ohio','a book recommendation','This guy Seth Kenlon wrote a book that might be useful to the budding game programmer using the 32bit. Developing Games on the Raspberry Pi: App Programming with Lua and L�ve, he has friends that need coffee!','2020-06-19 16:31:32'),
|
||
|
(2956,3096,'2020-06-21 17:36:23','cmhobbs','re: productive walk','Glad to hear it! \r\n\r\nIt was not nearly as challenging as I had expected given the tools on pcpartpicker. The hardest part was actually finding things that could ship! I had to swap parts on the build here and there via that site before I finally got everything together but it wasn\'t awful.\r\n\r\nHappy building!','2020-06-21 17:40:08'),
|
||
|
(2957,3101,'2020-06-22 02:44:26','Clinton Roy','Looking forward to further episodes.','Thank you for this episode, it\'s a nice gentle introduction to the topic, I definitely look forward to future episodes.','2020-06-22 06:33:23'),
|
||
|
(2958,3101,'2020-06-22 14:29:42','Ahuka','Excellent!','I\'m looking forward to more shows from this person.','2020-06-22 14:33:03'),
|
||
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(2959,3101,'2020-06-22 18:46:56','brian-in-ohio','more episodes','keep going with this, great topic','2020-06-22 19:04:16'),
|
||
|
(2960,3107,'2020-06-30 21:47:20','sigflup','Thanks','Thanks for this one!','2020-06-30 22:02:56'),
|
||
|
(2961,3108,'2020-07-01 08:12:33','Luna Jernberg','Firefox Flatpak','Hello\r\n\r\nWe have Firefox as both Flatpak and Snap','2020-07-01 08:27:08'),
|
||
|
(2962,3097,'2020-07-02 11:29:09','an anonymous listener','free software licensing','The discussion about licenses and contribution agreements was interesting and informative. For example I really liked the way Fred explained how LGPL works in the context of projects like Big Blue Button, and how it compares to AGPL. Thanks for the show!','2020-07-02 12:02:29'),
|
||
|
(2963,3097,'2020-07-02 15:25:58','Ahuka','Good interview','I really enjoyed the interview. Good solid information about an open source project.','2020-07-02 15:39:07'),
|
||
|
(2964,3106,'2020-07-03 06:09:36','Bob','Levels','Couldn\'t hear Martin at all, just a low mumble.','2020-07-03 08:32:28'),
|
||
|
(2965,3109,'2020-07-04 10:37:50','archer72','Very cool topic','I do like this topic. Look forward to the next episode.','2020-07-04 10:39:55'),
|
||
|
(2966,3111,'2020-07-07 14:59:44','crvs','On math @ HPR','I found it surprising that Ken would call it \"the dark side of teaching maths in HPR\" since I disttinctly recall in a community news show, not long ago Ken himself requested someone to do a show on Fourier (or was it Laplace) transforms!','2020-07-07 15:46:49'),
|
||
|
(2967,3106,'2020-07-07 16:47:39','Bruce Momjian','Amazon','The Amazon product based on Postgres 8 is called Redshift, based on Paraccel.','2020-07-07 17:17:28'),
|
||
|
(2968,3115,'2020-07-12 12:03:44','brian-in-ohio','surprise','From the title and the show coming from operator, I thought this would be about some cool way to find bugs in code. I was surprised to hear this was about real life bugs! Good luck operator, I feel your pain.','2020-07-12 12:06:47'),
|
||
|
(2969,3116,'2020-07-13 15:11:45','brian-in-ohio','network','I would love to hear more about how you built out this network. Great show!','2020-07-13 15:18:40'),
|
||
|
(2970,3116,'2020-07-14 17:09:08','Windigo','Co-op hosting','I\'d also enjoy hearing more about manor.space.\r\n\r\nThe co-op style of hosting services (also discussed on episode 2411, \"Co-op Paradise\") is something that I find very encouraging!','2020-07-14 17:48:34'),
|
||
|
(2971,3116,'2020-07-15 10:29:21','bk','Please tell us about how you built the Manor','I enjoyed your talk very much, and it has revived my project of creating this kind of resource to facilitate community with minimal dependence on The Cloud.\r\nThank you.\r\nI hope you can manage to do a follow-up talk with details for community builders that would help us do the same and build on your experience.','2020-07-15 10:31:45'),
|
||
|
(2972,3117,'2020-07-15 13:37:55','brian-in-ohio','computer learning today','I completely agree with the level of learning with computers today, so much of computer programming is opaque. Learning today seems to be, \"oh i learned i needed to do sudo infront of apt-get, pip-install blah\". Old computers, slackware install disks, forth on microcontrollers is the place to go to actually learn. Thanks for the show. Good to hear the roads are bad in other places than northwest ohio!','2020-07-15 13:39:31'),
|
||
|
(2973,3118,'2020-07-15 14:11:28','Guido','Nice episode on a weird language','Python is ancient, ever heard about Rust?','2020-07-15 14:18:07'),
|
||
|
(2974,2774,'2020-07-19 08:24:35','Sam','hpr2774 :: CJDNS and Yggdrasil','I thought your views were interesting. I was particularly interested in how you highlighted that CJDNS was going to monetized and Yggdrasil was not or at least yet.\r\n\r\nI\'ve read about CJDNS, Yggdrasil and IPFS and I\'m not sure exactly how all these overlap. My \"limited\" understanding is CJDNS and Yggdrasil \"are\" just the network but IPFS is the network plus a network storage system. I don\'t understand how IPFS network finds things or works. Sure it uses a hash, I get that, but the mechanics of finding the hash, how it determines what pieces of multiple copies it routes back and how I don\'t get yet.\r\n\r\nIt would seem to me if we could get something like Yggdrasil for the network that could have multiple encrypted hops like I2P or Tor and then have a store like IPFS, BUT you could choose what data you \"mirrored\" (like torrents or IPFS or zeronet)...well we would really have a kick ass open net that anyone could publish on anonymously and people could choose not to \"mirror\" some of the more seedy parts of the darknet.\r\n\r\nI think these are coming together. I wish it were faster.','2020-07-19 08:41:58'),
|
||
|
(2975,3122,'2020-07-21 05:38:20','bittin','Politics','This Podcast is more about American Politics then Devuan/Debian to be honest','2020-07-21 07:50:26'),
|
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|
(2976,3122,'2020-07-21 08:26:04','Dan','Purposely misleading episode','For all listeners, there is 2 minutes of discussion about Devuan, the remaining 32 are political commentary.\r\n\r\nI will no longer trust, or listen, to this contributor.','2020-07-21 08:29:31'),
|
||
|
(2977,3122,'2020-07-21 09:09:13','Ken Fallon','Updated show notes','We do not listen to shows prior to posting, to ensure hosts are given the freedom of speech. \r\nSee: https://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php#not_moderated\r\n\r\nAs noted by the commenter\'s, the shownotes do not accurately reflect the content in the episode. I have therefore updated the shownotes to more accurately reflect the content discussed.','2022-02-14 13:25:14'),
|
||
|
(2978,3122,'2020-07-21 14:12:14','draxil','Very interesting listen','Very interesting listen! Probably more interesting than an episode about Devuan to be honest.','2020-07-21 14:16:57'),
|
||
|
(2979,3122,'2020-07-22 13:44:03','b-yeezi','Interesting but misleading title','You are entitled to your political opinions, but please title your episode appropriately.\r\n\r\nI could talk about some of the accuracy of many of your statements, but I don\'t believe that this is the proper forum to do so.','2020-07-22 13:48:26'),
|
||
|
(2980,3119,'2020-07-22 23:55:30','an anonymous listener','security is hard','I think you overstated the security aspect of read-only filesystems. Even if you set it to read-only at the block device level, it won\'t stop a rootkit or kernel exploit from writing to the drive. Some USB drives, SD cards, and occasionally hard drives, claim to support device level read-only mode, but even then, they almost all have writable firmware that could be maliciously modified by software on the host (see BadUSB). The only consumer hardware I know of that supports anything close to physical write protection is the CD-ROM, and even most CD-ROM drives keep their firmware on a writable flash chip. \r\n\r\nMost of these are advanced attacks that average person will ever have to worry about, but worth keeping in mind. Read-only root filesystems are mainly meant for resilience against power failures and simple unprivileged malware, but it\'s not meant to provide any true security against sophisticated attacks. That\'s why we have UEFI SecureBoot.','2020-07-23 08:56:19'),
|
||
|
(2981,3122,'2020-07-23 13:08:32','Ko','Misuse of HPR','HPR is an open platform and it is very troubling to find out that it has been had. \r\nSomeone felt the need to troll the platform with political statements backed by doubtful arguments wrapped in a misleading title.','2020-07-23 13:32:32'),
|
||
|
(2982,3122,'2020-07-24 09:21:21','Ken Fallon','Apologies to Zen_Floater2','It was not Zen_Floater2 intention to have shownotes for this episode. When posting this show, I added the shownotes and tags to this episode.\r\n\r\nThe changes made were as follows:\r\n\r\n26c26\r\n< Tags: Devuan\r\n---\r\n> Tags: Devuan, Debian, sysvinit, OpenRC, systemd.\r\n30c30,31\r\n< I have no notes for this review\r\n---\r\n> From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia\r\n> Devuan is a fork Debian that uses sysvinit or OpenRC instead of systemd, which is the default in newer Debian releases. The Devuan development team aim to maintain compatibility with other init systems in the future and not detach Linux from other Unix systems.','2020-07-24 10:03:55'),
|
||
|
(2983,3122,'2020-07-26 15:05:10','x','Good!','Very interesting things that I had no idea about.','2020-07-26 15:30:21'),
|
||
|
(2984,3108,'2020-07-27 00:26:57','Klaatu','SD Card + encrypted hard drive','I love the idea of a bootable SD card reading /home from an encrypted hard drive, rendering the computer without the SD card \"a brick\". Great model.','2020-07-27 08:57:08'),
|
||
|
(2985,3122,'2020-07-27 09:08:40','igottrolledintolisteningtothis','Title should be','A short devuan review so im allowed to post this here then a full episode of my opinions on race and american politics','2020-07-27 09:11:24'),
|
||
|
(2986,3121,'2020-07-29 04:29:15','Klaatu','Team Mrs. Honeyhume','You only get one body in life, so why not decorate it?','2020-07-29 07:36:15'),
|
||
|
(2987,3119,'2020-07-29 12:54:32','Gumnos','OpenBSD on a Mini10','I\'ve got OpenBSD on a Mini10 as well (love it) but the graphics are slow on the GMA500 chip (no Polsulbo driver so it falls back to using VESA). Does yours have the same chipset and did you find accelerated drivers for it? Or do you just use it at the console (where it\'s pretty snappy).\r\n\r\nI\'ve upgraded mine to the maximum 2GB of RAM. put a newer SSD in it, and replaced the BCM wireless card (which never worked reliably) with an Atheros. But it\'s a wonderful little unit.\r\n\r\nThanks for the episode!','2020-07-29 13:14:25'),
|
||
|
(2988,3126,'2020-07-29 13:29:26','Dave Morriss','Etymology of \'geodesic\'','Hi Andrew,\r\n\r\nRegarding \'geodesic\' I found some answers here:\r\nhttps://www.etymonline.com/word/geodesic\r\n\r\nSo, \'geodesic\' is from \'geodesy\' which means \"surveying\".\r\nThen \'geodesy\' is built from \'ge\' (pertaining to the Earth) and \'daiein\' meaning \"to divide\".\r\n\r\nThis is just my limited summary, see https://www.etymonline.com/word/geodesy for the fuller definition.\r\n\r\nEnjoying the series; more please!\r\n\r\nDave','2020-07-29 13:44:19'),
|
||
|
(2989,3129,'2020-07-30 14:22:05','Jan','Zen_Floater2 asked for Comments on \"Explicit or not\"','Hi Zen_Floater2,\r\n\r\nthe show in question came into my podcatcher showing the title: \r\n\"Devuan review - and commentary\". I got the impression, the show would be about Devuan while not knowing at the time, what a Devuan might be.\r\n\r\nAfter listening I asked my self, why You did 2 topics under one headline, me not seeing the connection.\r\n\r\nIm pretty sure HPR-Folks noticed that too and might not have bothered doing a comment, if each topic were put in a show of its own.\r\n\r\nThanks for providing content, Zen_Floater2.\r\n\r\nJan (lacking Knowledge of English)','2020-07-30 14:44:13'),
|
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(2990,3121,'2020-07-31 11:36:02','Dave Morriss','I have an aversion to tattoos','Very interesting discussion. It made me think a lot about the subject.\r\n\r\nWhen I was a kid (1950\'s and 60\'s) tattoos weren\'t \"cool\". The society I grew up in (working class, Greater London, then Norfolk) was not supportive of them. They were things that people of \"lower class\" had - or at least, that was my impression.\r\n\r\nI have tried to shed as much of this type of attitude and prejudice as I can, but I still don\'t find myself wanting a tattoo. I have no problem with anyone else choosing to have them though, and in some cases I admire the choices they have made.\r\n\r\nI have never voiced this opinion to my kids (as far as I know), but neither of them were keen on the idea of having tattoos when I asked! The prospect of making a permanent bad decision about them was certainly a factor.\r\n\r\nThanks for the thought-provoking episode.\r\n\r\nDave','2020-07-31 11:59:57'),
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(2991,3129,'2020-07-31 16:11:04','brian-in-ohio','supreme court ruling','Quite entertaining, is zen-floater channeling 51-50? I call it quilt logic, pieces sown together that sometimes are beautiful and sometimes end up as pieces relegated to a bin in the attic. As far as the ruling, the supreme court ruling only applies to crimes covered under the major crimes act, so all the other oklahoma not existing anymore doesn\'t apply. Here\'s the link to the ruling https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/18-9526_9okb.pdf, read the first paragraph. Also, I\'m sure people in the UK, including occupied Ireland, probably don\'t care about Oklahoma, the reservation or electoral college with all the real threats to their own sovereignty that exist from the German empire. Keep the shows coming they are, if nothing else, entertaining. \r\nPS editing the show notes is not editing the content. I suspect all show notes are edited somehow to fit the formatting scheme the admins use.','2020-07-31 16:17:29'),
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(2992,3122,'2020-07-31 16:13:53','brian-in-ohio','the ruling','The supreme court ruling only applies to those crimes covered under the Major Crime Act. I don\'t think anyone is going to get out of paying taxes in Oklahoma anytime soon. Here\'s a link to the ruling\r\n\r\nhttps://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/18-9526_9okb.pdf','2020-07-31 16:17:29'),
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(2993,3126,'2020-07-31 22:41:39','sesamemucho','Special thanks','I\'ve enjoyed listening to your last two shows. You presented a very clear introduction to the concept. It\'s amazing how such an apparently small topic can unfold into something so complex and interesting.\r\n\r\nOn a tangent, I\'m doing exactly this calculation for a project at work, and this episode showed me a simpler and more easily explained way to do it.','2020-08-01 08:27:30'),
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(2994,3123,'2020-08-03 14:24:07','Archer72','Funny story','I was not meaning to have a Christmas in July episode, that is just the way it turned out. It was more a matter of letting life get in the way, as the project was finished in mid December. That and I get nervous about having to short of a show, or not being interesting enough.','2020-08-03 14:43:56'),
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(2995,3134,'2020-08-07 17:27:13','fatherfinch','Great Energy','Hey Daniel, \r\n\r\nGreat energy in this podcast. I generally don\'t like live music. That is not exactly true, I enjoy live recordings of music. But rarely do I enjoy attending the shows. This episode piqued my interest in checking out some of the virtual shows. \r\n\r\nI appreciate your contribution! Thank you for sharing your experience. \r\n\r\n-fatherfinch','2020-08-07 17:37:42'),
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(2996,3134,'2020-08-10 13:34:58','catn0b0t','TML 2020','Hey Daniel,\r\n\r\nJust wanted to reach out to you since I\'m a fan of the HPR podcasts and I just heard your review on the TML festival. Thank you very much for the nice review and I\'m glad you loved the show. We worked very hard on it to make it like this :-) I worked on the cybersecurity end of the operation, mostly monitoring for illegal streams.\r\n\r\nKind regards,\r\n\r\nCedric','2020-08-10 13:47:08'),
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(2997,3137,'2020-08-11 22:11:28','brian-in-ohio','some \'smart\' people may not take a vaccine','My son in law had Guillain–Barré syndrome when he was a child and now can not take vaccines. So not all people that would respond to a survey \'would you take vaccine x yes or no\' are stupid. Also 70% immunization rate would achieve this mystical state of herd immunity. Lastly, why is the US distance 6 feet and others ie the Netherlands is 1.5 meters where is the science in any of this? I wish Ahuka would be less disparaging of people with different opinions, calling people stupid diminishes what he has to say. What do you think zen-floater?','2020-08-12 08:29:47'),
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(2998,3137,'2020-08-12 12:54:55','Ahuka','Why it matters','I\'m sorry your son got Guillian-Barre syndrome. Of course that means he is not a candidate to get vaccinated, but that is precisely why it is so important that people who are physically capable got the vaccine. Because we don\'t want him to die of Covid-19 either, and for him it is other people\'s vaccinations that provide protection.\r\n\r\nThe 6 feet rule is an approximation based on research into how far virus-laden droplets will move when people are engaged in normal speech and similar activities. If people are doing something like singing, or exercising where they are breathing heavily, six feet may be too close.','2020-08-12 13:20:02'),
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(2999,3138,'2020-08-12 16:40:42','Ahuka','Excellent Interview','I really enjoyed the interview with Randal Schwartz. More of this would be great.','2020-08-12 16:57:58'),
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(3000,3137,'2020-08-13 05:15:37','Zen_Floater2','The Squirrel from the Magical Forrest','I must agree with you that Covid-19 has proven to cause damage to heart, lungs, and livers and kidneys and even brain damage.\r\n\r\nI think the part that I didn\'t understand was your comment about watching some video\'s that you admit Doctors would not endorse or watch... \r\n\r\nClearly, the medical community is divided on all this stuff. The half which is not siding with the WHO have been banned from Twitter and Facebook and have had their video\'s taken off of Youtube, thus making these corporate entities rulers of the truth.\r\nIN fact, they are unaccountable rulers of the truth.\r\n\r\nIf your a physicist in this world, and you disagree with Einstein in any way, express a belief in UFO\'s, or sometimes even show a realism for some of the things shown in the STAR TREK episodes,,, you are shown the door. The community will 100% throw you out the door. There\'s nothing to debate over there.\r\n\r\nBut with Covid-19, it\'s absolutely NOT cut and dried. There are no definitive statements from anyone on Covid-19. As you\'ve pointed out, they\'ve already proved some of the statements made about some of the treatments being talked about have been proven to be wrong and biased. \r\n\r\nPart of the blame lies in their bad record keeping. Hospitals will make an automatic $12,000 for every Covid-19 patient they log into the system. And therefore, just everybody had Covid-19 damage, even in you had terminal cancer or were hospice before the entire thing started,,, they file you as a Covid-19 death.\r\n\r\nGreat Britain has recently admitted they have discovered the same thing happened over there and thus their statistics and record keeping have been skewed badly. \r\n\r\nWe do not know for sure that 200,000 Americans have in fact died from Covid-19 this year so far. The data on deaths recorded every year in the United States has varied so widely over the past 50 years, it\'s truthfully uncertain who many we could attribute toward Covid-19. \r\n\r\nMore on next buffer.','2020-08-13 11:50:17'),
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(3001,3119,'2020-08-13 05:50:54','Zen_Floater2','reply back to Gumnos','I have a stock, from the factor Dell Mini 10. Never opened it up.\r\n1 GB of memory Intel Atom N450 cpu and 250 GB Hard Drive. The Hard drive is so old, it shows up as wd0!!! But, when I run Fuguita 386 on it, it shows up as sd0, go figure. OpenBSD supports AMD64 variants of their OS will all the Intel DRM. I\'m running the 386 version of OpenBSD and I\"m afraid I really don\'t know if this notebooks FredFlintstoneLake Intel Graphics is actually supported on the 386 version. Things are slow but not horrible on this laptop. I still have the original WIFI chip in this notebook and mine is Atheros. Dell has been known to switch out hardware on production lines -mid-stream- for all their computers so it doesn\'t surprise me one bit you had a different WIFI from mine. I\'ve still got the Original factory battery also. The Dell Mini 10 is fanless and quiet. OpenBSD doesn\'t PUSH the hardware into overheating. I need to look into expanding my memory, if that\'s even possible on this model as it was the very first of the Dell Mini 10 series, the first year they offered the Mini 10 Inspiron. I\'ve always been told the ram is soldered in on this model and that I was screwed but, I need to open this up and look around. Maybe at least upgrade my hard drive also and put some fresh CPU paste on the heat sink. It\'s over 12 years old now. Still very reliable, and I use it very day. I\'m using it now to type your message. Take care and bye..','2020-08-13 11:50:17'),
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(3002,3131,'2020-08-13 06:32:02','Zen_Floater2','I\'ve learned much.and I\'d like to share much as well...','It seems I\'ve gotten the MOST comments on my shows of anyone here in HPR in quite a long time. At first, they came after me for my show notes. When that didn\'t work, they switched to attacking my tiitles. I ignored that as well. Finally, they are referencing me on OTHER people\'s shows now. HPR3137 - Ahuka has a comment from one of his viewers and he\'s addressed it to me, Zen_Floater2. And as a Squirrel who lives in a Magical forrest, I pondered, how should I address this human being??? Why would he ask me about what I thought about Ahuka\'s show? Ahuka got only one negative comment on his show and Ahuka called the people who didn\'t follow his narrative stupid idiots I\'m guessing from the commentary. Study my work Ahuka and you will get more negative comments over time. I\'m a firm believer that if you do, you too can have most of the HPR audience out for your blood. And I\'ve never understood why humans would care about other humans not taking some vaccine. It clearly makes no sense and forces me to climb up a tree sometimes to get awy from Humans. Thank you everyone','2020-08-13 11:50:17'),
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(3003,3138,'2020-08-14 17:35:29','ClaudioM','Agree with Ahuka. Great Interview!','Fantastic interview with Randal. I also thought the FLOSS Weekly transition was rather abrupt and also wondered what happened. I also had no idea there was anything on their blog, especially after having conducted web searches right after it happened. Great to hear from him again and the things he\'s working on going forward.','2020-08-14 17:47:04'),
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(3004,3138,'2020-08-16 12:40:26','brian-in-ohio','follow up question','These guys missed a great opportunity, the art of the followw up question is dead. When Randll said it was on the blog why he got fired by leo, they should have asked, \"for those who don\'t follow the twit blog, could you recap the events that led to your being shown the door at twit?\" Here\'s the blog post link, https://twit.tv/posts/inside-twit/doc-searls-new-host-floss-weekly, its useless. Leo\'s terrible twit is dead long live monsterb and TiT radio!','2020-08-16 12:42:58'),
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(3005,3137,'2020-08-16 13:30:51','SkepticalA','Condescending','Too bad that everyone who isn’t as brainwashed as you is stupid. This is clearly overhyped and playing on people’s fears for financial gain. When my uncle died due to a pacemaker failure and the hospital listed coronavirus in order to collect their check, this became obvious. But hey, what do I know. I’m probably stupid...','2020-08-16 13:40:47'),
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(3006,3137,'2020-08-16 18:59:26','Bob','Fact Checks on one of your claims','The UK did in lower their records by 5,000. However the reason was not bad record keeping as claimed above. In England the tally included anyone who has tested positive for COVID-19 and later died, with no cut-off point between positive test and death. While Scotland only counts deaths that occur within 28 days of a positive test.\r\n\r\nTheir official statement is here:\r\nhttps://publichealthmatters.blog.gov.uk/2020/08/12/behind-the-headlines-counting-COVID-19-deaths/\r\n\r\nClassifications should be done as follows:\r\n\r\n\"A death due to COVID-19 is defined for surveillance purposes as a death resulting from a clinically compatible illness, in a probable or confirmed COVID-19 case, unless there is a clear alternative cause of death that cannot be related to COVID disease (e.g. trauma).\"\r\n\r\nhttps://www.who.int/classifications/icd/Guidelines_Cause_of_Death_COVID-19.pdf','2020-08-16 19:03:45'),
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(3007,3139,'2020-08-16 21:28:26','brian-in-ohio','the voice','The intro voice for that show was the best. How was it done?','2020-08-17 19:01:07'),
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(3008,3137,'2020-08-16 21:34:20','brian-in-ohio','sympathy','I wasn\'t looking for sympathy, I was hoping you would see that falling into using pejorative statements is exactly the cause of so many problems between people. Using the word stupid stops the conversation, that was my point.','2020-08-17 19:01:07'),
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(3009,3137,'2020-08-16 21:59:54','Ahuka','Clarification','Regarding the 6 foot distance of separation, I should have been clearer that this is a recommendation for when you are out-of-doors. There is no such things as a safe distance if you are indoors with someone who has the disease. If you are there for long you will get the disease.','2020-08-17 19:01:07'),
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(3010,3139,'2020-08-18 13:06:29','Ken Fallon','Voice','That was one of the GTTS voices. It is added as part of the show upload processes.','2020-08-18 18:59:35'),
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(3011,3137,'2020-08-19 04:30:36','Zen_Floater2','Detailed research Corbit Report','https://www.bitchute.com/video/0EYfFZnLAxI/','2020-08-19 18:58:24'),
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(3012,3143,'2020-08-19 19:25:08','brian-in-ohio','slackware','Thanks for the show, for slackware current users, alienbob has packages available here\'s the link https://www.slackware.com/~alien/slackbuilds/libreoffice/pkg64/current/','2022-02-14 13:25:15'),
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(3013,3144,'2020-08-20 17:53:29','b-yeezi','I deal with this all the time','Thanks for this episode. I write software in the medical field all the time. It\'s good to see that the best practices that I\'ve been taught are actually correct.\r\n\r\nI would love another episode like this!','2020-08-20 19:52:17'),
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(3014,3137,'2020-08-21 07:34:47','Anon','Conspiracy Theories: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver','https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0b_eHBZLM6U','2020-08-21 19:10:26'),
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(3015,3138,'2020-08-21 13:57:12','an anonymous listener','volume','Another great episode!\r\n\r\nBut... Martin, for the love of christ, will you please SPEAK UP?!?!\r\n\r\nYou\'re always so quiet and mumbly I can\'t hear you unless I turn my volume way up. Then Chris comes back on and blows out my eardrums until I turn it back down. \r\n\r\nPerhaps you could each record on separate audio channels, and then equalize the volume in post-production?\r\n\r\nThanks for the show, keep up the good work!','2020-08-21 19:10:26'),
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(3016,3148,'2020-08-29 00:53:56','Zen_Floater2','Vic 20','I had a Vic 20 once and wrote in basic and assembler on that machine. I thought the tape recorder was too expensive so I made my own out of a panasonic tape recorder and a bread board I put together.\r\nI wrote llog book programs, Amtor programs and Continental Code trainers on the Vic 20. It was a fun machine and very fast too.','2020-08-29 19:48:52'),
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(3017,3138,'2020-09-02 12:52:20','Robert','..._---_','<pre>Martin:\r\n.......,,,,,, ,,, Mmmmm ...... ...... .....\r\n\r\nmonochromec:\r\n\r\n# ####### # # ######\r\n# # # # # # #\r\n# # # # # # #\r\n# # # # # # #\r\n# # # # # # #\r\n# # # # # # #\r\n####### ####### ##### ######\r\n</pre>\r\n','2020-09-03 06:40:54'),
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(3020,3158,'2020-09-11 21:41:54','Ahuka','Fantastic show!','I loved this show, and I hope he does more \"war stories\" for us!','2020-09-12 18:59:12'),
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(3018,3146,'2020-09-05 15:03:02','Ken Fallon','Keep doing what you\'re doing','The only thing I would do is to put a beep or something between the segments.','2020-09-05 15:42:06'),
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(3019,3158,'2020-09-11 13:04:33','Beeza','The need for \"meta procedures\"','Hi Cedric. This is a fascinating episode.\r\n\r\nIt seems amazing that a company which is sufficiently concerned about security to hire a pen testing team did not have procedures in place to ensure the access control system server was protected with something better than admin/admin.\r\n\r\nMy guess is that they did have such procedures but that they were insufficiently monitored. You can have the tightest standards and procedures in the world, but if there is no checking for compliance they are worthless.','2020-09-11 18:33:17'),
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(3021,3154,'2020-09-11 22:46:28','Windigo','Nextcloud and self hosting','Thanks for the overview of Nextcloud - I run my own instance, and half of the apps you mentioned were news to me. It\'s become an essential part of my network, and I\'m still finding more uses for it!','2020-09-12 18:59:12'),
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(3022,3152,'2020-09-24 21:03:20','Reto','Link to the other knive podcast','Hi Dave,\r\n\r\nThank you for this podcast. A nice knife is like a nice fountain pen. Way too little chances to use it while it is such a nice product.\r\n\r\nThanks to your hint I listened to the podcast about OPINEL and it reminded me about mine, somewhere in a box, I was disappointed that it was\'nt stainless steel. I dug it out and learned that carbon steel is harder and can get a patina similar to other metall.\r\n\r\nNow, I like this rusty knive, because I understand :)\r\n\r\nCheers\r\nReto','2020-09-24 21:15:06'),
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(3023,3161,'2020-09-24 21:28:40','Reto','Sansa MP3 Players','Hi Dave,\r\n\r\nJust like you I have Sansa MP3 Players (Clip Sport & Clip Zip). These are awesome, something like 48 g, play several hours and if you treat them well last several years. Mine is now 6 years old. \r\nOGG is not their strenght, but can play most files. For this reason I always subscribe to MP3. \r\nI also like at least basic ID3-tags. The \'Album\' is an important tag and only ID3v2 works well on Sansa\'s firmware. \r\n\r\nUnfortunately, the Zip at someday got stuck at \"refreshing your media\". I read you could open it and flash Rockbox or try to access via serial, but the housing is very thight, almost zero gap.\r\n\r\nI plan to listen to your Rockbox flash podcast :)\r\n\r\nCheers\r\nReto','2020-09-25 19:03:16'),
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(3024,3167,'2020-09-27 07:18:49','Aaron','Nice conversation, thanks for sharing it','I have only recently discovered HPR and I\'m enjoying the variety of topics and hosts - thanks for the great resource!','2020-09-27 18:50:01'),
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(3025,3167,'2020-09-27 07:21:46','Zen_Floater2','Squirrels love local chit-chat','I especially enjoy local chit-chat conversations. There really should be more shows like these.','2020-09-27 18:50:01'),
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(3026,3161,'2020-09-27 17:09:38','Dave Morriss','Rockbox and Sansa players','Hi Reto,\r\n\r\nI have found that if the players lock up in some way a very long press on the on/off button can reset them. Worth a try anyway.\r\n\r\nInstalling Rockbox is not difficult. All you need to do is download the installer (https://www.rockbox.org/download/) and follow the instructions on the site. It\'s years since I have done it but I remember that it was very straightforward at the time. You don\'t need to dismantle the player in any way.\r\n\r\nI found the original SanDisk software was very poor but Rockbox has provided all the features I need for many years.\r\n\r\nDave','2020-09-27 18:50:02'),
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(3027,3161,'2020-09-27 21:38:33','Kevin O\'Brien','My Rockbox/Sansa experience','My favorite combo was the Sansa Clip Plus with Rockbox. Sadly, San Disk stopped making them','2020-09-28 18:04:12'),
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(3028,3168,'2020-09-27 21:56:16','0xf10e','Why an additional disk/zpool?','Hi norrist,\r\n\r\nwhy do you recommend a 2nd disk with\r\na new pool to use for iocage? Using\r\niocage on the host\'s root(fs) pool\r\nworks just fine. If I had spare disk\r\n(or even cheap storage for a VPS) I\r\nwould rather use it to mirror my\r\nsystem including the iocage dataset.\r\n\r\nRegards, 0xf10e','2020-09-28 18:04:12'),
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(3029,3168,'2020-09-28 21:32:33','norrist','2nd disk for iocage','A second disk is not an absolute requirement if you are already using ZFS on root. I made the recommendation for a second disk because some VPS providers still default to UFS for the root partition. \r\n\r\nThanks to 0xf10e for the feedback','2020-09-29 18:25:19'),
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(3030,3161,'2020-09-29 13:04:00','Dave Morriss','No more Sansa Clip Plus','Hi Ahuka,\r\n\r\nYes, I was very sad to see the trend away from San Disk Sansa players that could run Rockbox, and then their disappearance. I did manage to buy some new, refurbished and second-hand players before prices became ridiculous, and have survived on them for many years. When they have all stopped working I don\'t know what I\'ll do!','2020-09-29 18:25:19'),
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(3031,3167,'2020-09-29 15:50:38','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feedback','Aaron, Zen_Floater2,\r\n\r\nGlad you are enjoying HPR and our chit-chat shows.They are quite fun to do, and we\'ll probably make more when we can.','2020-09-29 18:25:19'),
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(3032,3175,'2020-10-03 14:49:29','Gumnos','Using the X \"Compose\" key','When typing in Spanish or French, I\'ve long used the Compose key in X. In my startup script (~/.xinit, ~/.xsession, or for me as a fluxbox user, ~/.fluxbox/startup) I have the following line\r\n\r\nsetxkbmap -option compose:caps\r\n\r\nwhich turns my Caps key (which I never otherwise use) into a Compose key (here are ways to use other keys instead, if you prefer).\r\n\r\nI can then type \"{compose}{e}{\'}\" to get \"é\" or I type \"{compose}{n}{~}\" to get \"ñ\" or \"{compose}{c}{,}\" to get \"ç\". Similarly I can use \"{compose}{?}{?}\" and \"{compose}{!}{!}\" to get \"¿\" and \"¡\". There are hundreds of these composable characters and many are intuitive enough that I can guess them if I don\'t know them cold.\r\n\r\nShould work out of the box on Linux & BSD systems running X, and work with pretty much every X application.','2020-10-03 19:42:30'),
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(3033,3176,'2020-10-05 02:44:50','Mike Ray','YAML, spacing and ansible-lint','Interestingly, although I can\'t see, I don\'t find the indentation in YAML as annoying or as difficult as Python. And:\r\n\r\npip3 install ansible-lint\r\n\r\nWill give you a good linter for Ansible YAML.\r\n\r\nI have a repository on github:\r\n\r\ngithub.com.cromarty/ansible-raspberry-pi\r\n\r\nWith loads of roles and playbooks, mostly with an a11y bent.\r\n\r\nI think I might do a show about. I love writing Ansible and I\'m good at it, although I say it myself.\r\n\r\nWhile I am here...espeak rules OK? :-)','2020-10-05 18:48:37'),
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(3034,3179,'2020-10-09 02:24:28','janedoc','using make mkv','Thanks for your show. I really enjoy make mkv. unfortunately, I have had better luck with it on my windows partition, there are more restrictions ripping DVDs when I use my ubuntu laptop. Since my home has limited broadband, I like to buy DVDs and rip them on my computer to watch off line. I use handbrake to compress the video files. So, you\'re not the only one who uses make mkv!','2020-10-09 18:36:23'),
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(3035,3180,'2020-10-10 12:54:33','archer72','contribution back','Thanks for the show and the Patreon link. I would like to give a little to some projects too, but sometimes it is a bit tricky to find a way to regularly donate. For example, I started using Fedora, and so does my wife, but could not even find a one time donation button.','2020-10-10 19:12:09'),
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(3036,3180,'2020-10-10 21:43:17','Kevin O\'Brien','Donating to Fedora','The Fedora Wiki page (https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Contribute) explains that they are not looking for money, which I suspect is because they have strong corporate support. I would guess Ubuntu is much the same. But there is more than one way to support a project you like. How about doing some shows on Fedora, why you like it, how to configure it, and so on.','2020-10-11 19:01:18'),
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(3037,3184,'2020-10-15 01:31:51','Clinton Roy','Mix not quite right?','It\'s almost like the separate streams were spliced on top of each other, rather than interleaved?','2020-10-15 19:38:32'),
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(3038,3185,'2020-10-16 16:49:48','brian-in-ohio','fear porn','Good show. but I\'m a bit confused, people tell me there are to many people on planet earth, to much man made global climate change. Isn\'t disease a good thing? Doesn\'t it thin the herd? What should I be afraid of today? Too many people? Too much C02? Capatalism?','2020-10-16 18:58:50'),
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(3039,3153,'2020-10-21 11:26:44','Ken Fallon','Thank for this','I knew this had to be on the Internet somewhere.','2020-10-21 19:25:02'),
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(3040,3191,'2020-10-26 15:58:21','mcnalu','Interesting info from Sweden','Thank you for this show. I found it very interesting to hear how another country/county is dealing with this virus from an individual\'s perspective. We often hear that Sweden is dealing with COVID-19 by requiring much lighter restrictions than where I am in Scotland/UK but your description doesn\'t sound very different from the situation here. One notable difference is that you said older children are not all back at school. Here *all* children are back but due to an outbreak at his school my son is currently at home self isolating as are most of his year group (15-16 year olds) of 100 or so pupils. This should not have come as a surprise as I understand that the virus spreads amongst older children much like it does with adults, though the disease is much less severe in most cases.','2020-10-26 20:21:04'),
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(3041,3187,'2020-10-26 21:51:15','Cedric De Vroey','Also getting into Ansible','Hi Norrist,\r\nI have just recently started using Ansible. I\'m currently playing with my new toy, a Turing Pi board equiped with 7 Raspberry Pi Compute modules, basically it\'s like a single board cluster so to speak :-) Anyways, I found Ansible extremely helpfull in setting these up.\r\nFirst I made sure all Pi\'s had a fresh install of Ubuntu server with Ssh enabled and an account that authorized my public key. Then I just created a simple inventory file with the IPs of each node and I was good to go. Then I could just do:\r\nansible -c cluster -a \"sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y kubernetes\"','2020-10-27 19:12:06'),
|
||
|
(3042,3189,'2020-10-26 22:11:20','Cedric De Vroey','Love graveyards','Hey Ken, loved the episode. I also like walking around on grave yards, they combine the best in of three key factors I think:\r\n1) Silence. There are a lot of loud places these days but a graveyard is almost everywhere a place of serenity. \r\n2) Art. I don\'t know how things are over there but here a lot of graves are real works of art.\r\n3) History. Even the grave yard of a small little town tells dozens of stories. \r\n\r\nVisiting tips in Europe from a fellow grave yard lover:\r\n- Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, FR\r\n- Schoonselhof in Antwerp, BE','2020-10-27 19:12:07'),
|
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|
(3043,3185,'2020-10-26 22:17:31','Cedric De Vroey','Ahuka','Great show. Coincidently I had heard a show on the same topic on national radio here in Belgium. Their angle was how the Spanish Flue had actually ended the first world war, and that most of the casualties in that conflict originated from that desease instead of the fighting.','2020-10-27 19:12:07'),
|
||
|
(3044,3184,'2020-10-26 23:27:21','Cedric De Vroey','Great show keep them comming :-)','Hey man, I love this show each and everytime. The mood is great and the content is very much interesting. I love listening to people talking about interesting things in a relaxed context and this show pulls that perfectly. Keep them comming','2020-10-27 19:12:07'),
|
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|
(3045,3189,'2020-10-28 08:19:49','Clinton Roy','Interesting','I found this quite interesting, I\'ve never even thought about such requirements; thank you.','2020-10-28 20:47:32'),
|
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|
(3046,3175,'2020-10-31 14:17:54','Ken Fallon','Cheat sheet','https://cheatography.com/davechild/cheat-sheets/ubuntu-compose-key-combinations/pdf_bw/','2020-10-31 19:53:14'),
|
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|
(3047,3193,'2020-11-03 13:05:59','brian-in-ohio','dark-table','Great show. Have you considered doing a series on Darktable? It would dovetail nicely with the GIMP series.','2020-11-03 19:39:41'),
|
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|
(3048,3179,'2020-11-03 13:27:52','Archer72','re: janedoc','Wow, sounds like a great idea for a show!\r\n\r\nWhat did you find works best for the compression settings? Did you use standard setting, or find tweaks that would best suit your setup?','2020-11-03 19:39:41'),
|
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|
(3049,3193,'2020-11-03 20:33:13','Ahuka','Agree with Brian','I think Brian has the right idea. A show, or maybe several, on darktable would be awesome!','2020-11-03 21:12:21'),
|
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|
(3050,3245,'2020-11-07 17:07:59','Paul Quirk','Show warning','Electricity can kill you and burn down your house. Before doing any\r\nelectrical work, please be sure to follow all local codes and safety\r\nprocedures according to the authority that has jurisdiction in your\r\narea.','2020-11-07 20:27:36'),
|
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|
(3051,3202,'2020-11-10 13:46:29','Enigma','Great first show','Enjoyed your first show, always knew i wanted to be a vampire.','2020-11-10 20:10:19'),
|
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|
(3052,3206,'2020-11-16 15:34:07','Mike Ray','Thanks for a great show','Thanks for this episode Klaatu.\r\n\r\nThere were some good things in there to think about. Bit of a pity you didn\'t use the \'theatre of the mind\' phrase to emphasise the way DMs and players can enhance their enjoyment by graphic and detailed description. But I guess it is a bit of a cliche.\r\n\r\nI will think about responding to this show with one of my own, and what I have done on the way to taking up D&D again after over forty years of not playing since I was at school.\r\n\r\nOne term I had never heard until this show is \'dice tower\'. Now I think you might have caused a few more quid to leave my bank and end up in Jeff Bezos\'. Even though I can\'t see the dice I have been unable to resist buying lots of them recently.\r\n\r\nOn listening to the \'Critical Role\' podcast, I fell in love with the sound of what sounded like a wooden dice tray.\r\n\r\nTyping \'roll d20\' at a Linux prompt is useful, but lacks soul.','2020-11-16 19:51:39'),
|
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|
(3053,1771,'2020-11-19 18:15:52','Ken Fallon','Yes - found it','I *knew* someone did a show about this. I should have guessed.','2020-11-19 18:20:28'),
|
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|
(3054,1796,'2020-11-19 18:21:37','Ken Fallon','And this one as well','Ahhh finally - the whole piece of the puzzle !','2020-11-19 21:04:15'),
|
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|
(3055,2881,'2020-11-19 18:38:51','Ken Fallon','And the final piece of the puzzle','Proving I have totally lost my memory','2020-11-19 21:04:15'),
|
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|
(3056,3209,'2020-11-19 22:13:59','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','Great interview with Frank Karlitschek. I\'d love to know more about Next Cloud.','2020-11-20 19:37:47'),
|
||
|
(3057,3208,'2020-11-23 12:40:08','Charliebrownau','Feedback - HPR 3208e','Gday Paul\r\nI emailed you a feedback responce\r\n\r\n\r\nRegards\r\nCharliebrownau','2020-11-23 19:30:33'),
|
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|
(3058,3126,'2020-11-25 16:43:29','mcnalu','Thanks for the comments','Dave - thank you for looking that up. Dividing surprises me actually as I was thinking it was more to do with movement but lines divide a 2D space and great circles divide a sphere so it makes sense.\r\n\r\nsesamemucho - glad it was helpful. \"On a tangent...\" is a very apt choice of words!','2020-11-25 20:28:06'),
|
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|
(3059,3213,'2020-11-25 22:50:07','norrist','Great episode','I hope you do more about work in the electrical trades.\r\nMaybe some details about getting into the industry and what apprenticeships are like.','2020-11-26 20:11:33'),
|
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|
(3060,3213,'2020-11-27 15:05:56','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','I thought this was a great show. I look forward to more.','2020-11-27 19:20:25'),
|
||
|
(3061,3090,'2020-12-01 20:05:06','nstr','wow','hey, operat0r just wanted to let you know that this is probably my absolute favorite hpr episode to date. very good! made me want to get more into networking. thanks and keep up the good work!','2020-12-01 20:42:01'),
|
||
|
(3062,3158,'2020-12-03 10:09:41','crust punk','untitled','Thanks for a wonderful episode. It amazes me that there are actual people out there having this as their job. It seems like a dream come true, to me. Here I am unemployed atm, trying to scrape by. This surely puts one\'s life into perspective. lol.','2020-12-03 21:53:30'),
|
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|
(3063,3218,'2020-12-03 15:12:39','Kevin O\'Brien','Another great show','I am enjoying Paul Quirk\'s shows, and I\'m looking forward to more. Darktable sounds like an interesting application that I need to check out.','2020-12-03 21:53:30'),
|
||
|
(3064,3207,'2020-12-04 20:35:41','operat0r','old days','Great eps last time I talked to any of thos folks was years ago. I think I ran into droops 5+ years ago. We used to have a local group that met up at \"Frys Electronics\" called hackatl or something. I\'m waiting to start up local meetup here in Roswell GA','2020-12-04 20:57:09'),
|
||
|
(3065,3220,'2020-12-05 18:37:07','sesamemucho','A complete and conclusive report','Thanks for your shows about the Fediverse. I think I\'m going to have to check it out.','2020-12-05 19:16:37'),
|
||
|
(3066,3220,'2020-12-05 22:13:26','Ahuka','You are most welcome','I\'m glad you enjoyed it, and please do check it out. I am finding the Fediverse very congenial.','2020-12-06 20:51:26'),
|
||
|
(3067,3218,'2020-12-06 21:13:01','Ray Arachelian','would have been useful to have this podcast as a video instead','When talking about GUIs it would have been a lot more useful to have a video podcast instead. Seeing it in action would then have been possible.','2020-12-07 19:05:51'),
|
||
|
(3068,3218,'2020-12-08 09:37:53','Ken Fallon','Supporting Video','Hi Ray,\r\n\r\nThanks for the feedback. HPR is a Audio only Podcast, but I think Paul did a great job of describing the tool. I was able to follow along without problem while out and about.\r\n\r\nIf you are interested in helping out, feel free to record a screen cast of the steps Paul took with this show as the audio track. We will happily link it here, or if you release it under a Creative Commons License we can add it to the episode.\r\n\r\nKen.','2020-12-08 19:24:49'),
|
||
|
(3069,3223,'2020-12-12 13:54:41','Brian-in-ohio','compliment','Good to hear from you. I appreciated the show. Thanks for your insight. Could you do a show on the mechanics of the PCR test? Also, I hope this show doesn\'t lead people to think centralized controlled governments are the solution to any problem. Open standards, decentralization, liberty and freedom for ALL!','2020-12-12 21:55:49'),
|
||
|
(3070,3227,'2020-12-16 21:05:21','Jon Kulp','Pictures!','Great episode! I really enjoyed it but there\'s a major component missing. PICTURES of your fish and tanks! I kept wanting to see these. Looking forward to follow-ups.','2020-12-17 21:51:25'),
|
||
|
(3071,3226,'2020-12-16 21:10:26','Jon Kulp','I like it but probably won\'t switch completely','This was a great episode, and I really like the tool. I downloaded and tried it out and it works just as advertised. I don\'t think I will be using this as my primary ToDo list since it would require me to be sitting at a terminal to access it, but I\'m glad to know about it. I mostly use MyTinyToDo list (see hpr1899 :: MyTinyTodo List), which I have installed on my virtual private server and can access from any web browser. I also use the Tasks application on Office365 for certain tasks at work, since that\'s the platform our University uses. I definitely find taskwarrior appealing, though, and I\'m amazed at the robust feature set. Thanks for this introduction.','2020-12-17 21:51:25'),
|
||
|
(3072,3226,'2020-12-20 14:58:24','Dave Morriss','Write a manual!','Great show!\r\n\r\nI have tinkered with taskwarrior for years but never used it in earnest. It\'s been around for quite a while, and has developed a lot in its lifetime, but I have never quite found that it could do what I wanted. I think this is partly because you have to explore every nook and cranny of what it offers before its usefulness becomes clear - or maybe I mean *I* have to do this!\r\n\r\nI have always found its documentation to be a bit difficult to penetrate, because of the way it\'s laid out, and I haven\'t persisted. I mainly use the task capabilities of Thunderbird to remind me what I should be doing. However, I\'d like to master taskwarrior and look forward to reading your book about it ;-)','2020-12-20 19:32:03'),
|
||
|
(3073,3223,'2020-12-21 14:45:46','b-yeezi','re: compliment','I will definitely do a show on PCR.\r\n\r\nAlso, I agree with you that open standards and decentralization are good things. However, without the open standards and a cohesive, unified plan, decentralization leads to all the problems I\'ve described here.','2020-12-21 19:47:13'),
|
||
|
(3074,3232,'2020-12-22 04:58:19','the pro','this is a nice group','this is very nice','2020-12-22 19:41:08'),
|
||
|
(3075,3232,'2020-12-22 11:34:37','Ken Fallon','Upgrade via the UI ?','Hi Klaatu,\r\n\r\nI have used the UI for upgrading \r\n\r\n> Profile Icon \r\n> Settings \r\n> Administration \r\n> Overview Upgrade\r\n\r\nIs there any reason not do do that ?','2020-12-22 19:41:08'),
|
||
|
(3076,3232,'2020-12-23 14:43:26','Kevin O\'Brien','Good inspiration!','Thank you for this information, it is getting me thinking. I have an account on a Web hosting service, and it sounds like maybe I could install an instance there. But I wonder if I should create separate domain for that. My sites run WordPress and of course have MySQL databases for that, but can you have both a WordPress site and a NextCloud instance on a single database?','2020-12-23 22:07:10'),
|
||
|
(3077,3236,'2020-12-28 13:52:58','ClaudioM','Links for the Episode','Here are some links I found as I listened to the episode. Tried to get them as I listened since I forgot to send them to Pat due to the holidays.\r\n\r\nThis page has been around for years. Some links might be stale or dead.\r\nhttps://linux-sound.org/\r\n\r\nSome of the sound fonts I\'ve used:\r\nhttps://midkar.com/soundfonts/\r\nhttps://www.pvv.org/~hammer\r\nhttps://www.michaelpichermusic.com/sample-libraries\r\n\r\nMIDI/Music software discussed:\r\nJACK (JACK Audio Connection Kit)\r\nhttps://jackaudio.org/\r\nQtractor\r\nhttps://qtractor.sourceforge.io/\r\nArdour\r\nhttps://ardour.org/\r\nReaper\r\nhttps://www.reaper.fm/index.php\r\nCarla\r\nhttps://kx.studio/Applications:Carla\r\nDuality Bass \r\nhttps://audio-assault.com/duality.php\r\n\r\nMy Soundcloud page.\r\nhttps://www.soundcloud.com/claudiom72\r\n\r\nOpen source synthesizers:\r\nhttps://www.moddevices.com/\r\nhttps://www.linuxsynths.com/\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korg_OASYS (Finally found that hardware Linux-based synth.)\r\nhttps://synthesia.sourceforge.net/\r\nhttps://zynthian.org/ (Don\'t remember if this was mentioned, but here it is. :-p)\r\n\r\nPipewire\r\nhttps://pipewire.org/\r\n\r\nunfa\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAYKj_peyESIMDp5LtHlH2A','2022-02-14 13:25:15'),
|
||
|
(3078,3231,'2020-12-29 16:56:51','Windigo','Great technique','This technique seems like a great way to allow my loved ones to have an emergency \"skeleton key\" for all of my computers... in case that hypothetical \"bus\" ever shows up.\r\n\r\nThanks so much for the tip!','2020-12-29 19:53:12'),
|
||
|
(3079,3237,'2021-01-04 23:19:22','jezra','blather','Hi Jon, \r\nIt has been a while since any development work has been done on Blather. The codebase was ported to newer versions of Python, Gtk, Qt, and Pocketsphinx in 2017. Unfortunately, it would appear that every Linux distro is missing *something* that is required for the \"new\" version, and my primary Blather machine (Debian 11) still runs the old version of Blather with all of the old libraries installed. It is a depressing situation. harumph','2021-01-05 20:46:34'),
|
||
|
(3080,3242,'2021-01-06 13:56:31','Ken Fallon','Video','Do you have a link to the Video referenced.','2021-01-06 22:34:48'),
|
||
|
(3081,3242,'2021-01-07 02:24:21','Klaatu','Cool skills','I am impressed by your Chromebook skills. Teach me your ways.','2021-01-07 20:48:22'),
|
||
|
(3082,3242,'2021-01-08 17:34:24','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','Fabulous show, and interesting concept of using Klaatu\'s show and adding to it. It was so interesting I am working on my own follow-up to add to the conversation.\r\n\r\nI would love to hear more about the online video editing he was talking about. My own experiences with kdenlive have not been that good, for whatever reason.','2021-01-08 21:28:33'),
|
||
|
(3083,3236,'2021-01-10 03:02:52','Marc Lavallee','Jack and Pulseadio','Jack can work with Pulseaudio, I use it by default. \r\n\r\nThe Ubuntu Studio provides all the required configurations and tools to use Jack with Pulseaudio, along with a low-latency kernel.\r\n\r\nhttps://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuStudio/UbuntuStudioControls\r\n\r\nI\'m not waiting for Pipewire...','2021-01-16 09:45:46'),
|
||
|
(3084,3240,'2021-01-11 22:03:52','Great episode','Important information, thank you','Really useful and educational episode. It\'s easy to not think about vulnerabilities, but it\'s so important to keep updated on the ones that are out there, and to learn from trends. Thanks for this reminder.','2021-01-12 19:54:58'),
|
||
|
(3085,3244,'2021-01-12 13:03:24','Kevin O\'Brien','I\'m jealous!','I wish I had an ISP as good as that where I am.','2021-01-12 19:54:59'),
|
||
|
(3086,3248,'2021-01-13 18:58:11','norrist','Is b-yeezi a genius?','As if a masterclass on AWK wasn\'t enough, now he gives us a detailed explanation of PCR testing.\r\n\r\nThank you for this episode. It was incredibly interesting.','2021-01-13 20:48:04'),
|
||
|
(3087,3242,'2021-01-17 10:16:17','Reto','I like the concept','There was the Blog and then the Podcasts. Soon after VBlogs (Videoblogs) came up. While a podcast is/was to me a conversation between two or more people, the content on HPR is to me 96% more like an A-Blog (Audioblog).\r\nWhile hearing Ken & Dave asking for more content, I would like to do that, but do I want to do a Podcast or an A-Blog?\r\n\r\nSo, although they were not speaking with eachother, I liked the concept and content.','2021-01-17 19:56:54'),
|
||
|
(3088,3246,'2021-01-19 22:39:08','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','THis was a great show. I hope to hear more.','2021-01-20 22:44:09'),
|
||
|
(3089,3247,'2021-01-19 22:40:12','Kevin O\'Brien','Excellent!','It is always good to hear from a new host, and I love the routine he has.','2021-01-20 22:44:09'),
|
||
|
(3090,3248,'2021-01-20 00:05:54','Kevin O\'Brien','Another fantastic show','I suspect b-yeezi has some serious scientific training because he does a good job on this. A common misconception Ihave heard form soe people is that the MRNA vaccines might change DNA. And it just doesn\'t work that way. DNA is what produces RNA, not the other way around.','2021-01-20 22:44:10'),
|
||
|
(3091,3253,'2021-01-20 01:14:53','b-yeezi','New info, even for me','I\'ve been using Pandas and Numpy for years, and didn\'t know about np.select (from your code example). That\'s definitely going to come in handy.','2021-01-20 22:44:10'),
|
||
|
(3092,3249,'2021-01-22 12:37:35','Operat0r','greets!','Greetings and great show! yall rock! Now we got kernals that are like a terabyte...ohhh you need something? yah man just turn all these kernal mods on ... everything is fine...\r\n\r\nI just discovered nethogs in linux. Along with tmux zi have a dashboard that shows GPU / CPU / Network stats/pids \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n# tmux 3 pane failsause\r\npkill -f tmux\r\ntmux new-session -s asdf -n myWindow -d \'bashtop\'; \r\nsplit-window -d \'nethogs -v 3\'; \r\nsplit-window -d \'intel_gpu_top\'; \r\nselect-pane -t 0 ; \r\nresize-pane -y 24 ; attach-session','2021-01-22 20:40:14'),
|
||
|
(3093,3244,'2021-01-24 20:38:06','Dave Morriss','Great show for lifting the spirits','Wow! I\'m enormously impressed by Freedom Internet. This is how businesses should be run! Thanks for this great interview.','2021-01-24 20:40:02'),
|
||
|
(3094,3257,'2021-01-26 05:04:52','b-yeezi','I can relate','Don\'t worry. You\'re not the only black host in HPR! I\'ve got plenty of stories just like yours. I can relate to your experiences.','2021-01-26 20:30:40'),
|
||
|
(3095,3257,'2021-01-26 09:21:40','Tony Hughes','The lack of diversity in Linux','Hi Swift, I just wanted to say thank you for your show it is always good to hear things from the perspective of the a person who \'any\' community finds hard to reach. \r\n\r\nI know this is not a simple issue and there are many reasons why different community\'s do not mix, but hearing your experience and thoughts on the issue was very refreshing. \r\n\r\nThank you for a very thoughtful episode.\r\n\r\nTony Hughes','2021-01-26 20:30:40'),
|
||
|
(3096,3257,'2021-01-27 01:21:11','Beeza','Thoughts on diversity','Hi Swift. Really enjoyed your show. \r\n\r\nIf you look at the representation of the black community in the wider community of Linux/FLOSS then I think you are definitely on to something. However, there are a great number of non-white contributors to FLOSS projects all over the world - particularly on the Indian sub-continent. It would, I think, be a shame if anybody new to Linux and FLOSS felt there may be any kind of bias against, or any favour of, any racial group - not that I think you were suggesting that there is.\r\n\r\nBecause communication between contributors on projects often takes place using text-based messaging, for the most part we probably have no idea what the people we correspond with look like, or are like as people. Everyone is as good as their contributions, which is just as it should be.\r\n\r\nYou made the point that if you had not told the listeners of your racial background nobody would likely have known from your voice or accent. Absolutely right, so it\'s entirely possible that could be the case with a number of other HPR contributors.\r\n\r\nWomen, though, have far more distinctive voices so I think it\'s indisputable that of 3000+ HPR shows, the number submitted by women is pitiful. Diversity takes many forms, so I think there is at least as big an issue with gender diversity in Linux/FLOSS as there is in ethnicity.\r\n\r\nTo think in terms of a diversity \"problem\" hints at there being conscious efforts to attract or exclude certain groups. I honestly don\'t think that is the case in the Linux/FLOSS world, but there can be no doubt that broadening its appeal as widely as possible across society can only bring benefits at every level.','2021-01-27 20:53:22'),
|
||
|
(3097,3258,'2021-01-28 18:31:03','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','Great show, and I am promoting it on my social media.','2021-01-28 22:17:31'),
|
||
|
(3098,3289,'2021-01-29 07:10:12','monochromec','apachectl restart vs. systemctl restart apache2.service','\"I had been using systemctl restart apache2.service to restart apache, but the recommended way is to use apache2ctl.\"\r\n\r\nInteresting observation, as the only difference seems to be a PrivateTmp clause in the unit definition of the service. \r\n\r\nI wonder why exactly that made a difference indeed...','2021-01-29 21:02:10'),
|
||
|
(3099,3252,'2021-01-29 14:51:38','Ken Fallon','Using this today','for i in {{1..100000}};do echo thanks a ${i};done','2021-01-29 21:02:10'),
|
||
|
(3100,3234,'2021-01-30 06:07:40','Windigo','IPad screen','I have yet to crack a screen on any of my devices (knock on wood), but hearing the story of your IPad made me wince as if I had.\r\n\r\nAs a silver lining, it made a very enjoyable episode. Thanks!','2021-01-30 19:13:18'),
|
||
|
(3101,3259,'2021-02-01 13:24:22','archer72','Show name','Yes, Ken, the show name was somewhat intentional. This was only after I saw your future show on the Internet Archive while I was preparing show notes, and thought it would be a nice play on words.','2021-02-01 20:40:13'),
|
||
|
(3102,3262,'2021-02-02 19:12:50','norist','Storyteller','Thank you, swift110 , for the episode. You have a gift for storytelling, and I hope you continue. This is an important issue. I don\'t know how to help except to promote stories like this. I look forward to hearing from swift110 again.','2021-02-02 20:32:18'),
|
||
|
(3103,3262,'2021-02-04 04:08:55','Bill n1vux','well said','I agree with norist, swift110 is quite the story-teller. \r\n\r\nI could tell you were a man of taste when i saw the ThinkPad on your prior eps listing. T420 is a great Linux platform! (Especially sweet if bought refurb. :-D )\r\n\r\n(FWIW, Wikipedia says Langston Terraces were second federally funded projects in the nation.)\r\n\r\nYou\'re asking good questions.\r\n\r\nOne of the newest housing projects in Boston has a Technology Center within the campus, co-sponsored by MIT. southendtechcenter.org \r\nWhen Ubuntu LoCo teams were dis-established, some of the core volunteers here moved there.','2021-02-04 21:48:48'),
|
||
|
(3104,3262,'2021-02-04 23:49:10','Kevin O\'Brien','Further discussion','I thought this show was very timely, and I would welcome further discussion. Freed software and open technology create possibilities, but they aren\'t guaranteed if people don\'t take the necessary actions.','2021-02-05 19:06:47'),
|
||
|
(3105,3187,'2021-02-10 21:52:20','Windigo','Interesting approach','I\'m currently battling with split-horizon DNS and DHCP on my local LAN, using a PiHole and the underlying dnsmasq server.\r\n\r\nI\'m very happy to have this episode as a \"Plan B\"; it\'s a very clever way to roll your own network services without having to worry about manual configs and fragile setups.\r\n\r\nThanks for the great episode!','2021-02-10 22:40:59'),
|
||
|
(3106,3269,'2021-02-12 13:46:50','claudiom','Thanks for the invite....','...I\'ll have my agent contact you. ;-)','2021-02-12 20:06:25'),
|
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(3107,3262,'2021-02-15 21:51:15','blizzack','Systematically kept out - part 1','I enjoy hearing stories about (African) American experiences like this. There was...as you mentioned a \'Great Black Migration\' that happened in the States. It sounds as though you\'ve done quite well for yourself and you have a strong community around that cares about you getting ahead in life. That\'s awesome and we all need something like this in our lives.\r\n\r\nThanks for sharing your back story about you and your family. I do appreciate someone talking about something else other their newest laptop, or the latest distro of their favorite operating system.\r\n\r\nThis is a podcast and like most podcasts there\'s lots of rambling and lots of pundits.\r\n\r\nI think you are making some broad generalizations about People Of Color (POC) in America -- even though you are a member of that community. I know you stated - this is from your experience.\r\n\r\nFor instance, you state you feel the reason that POC are not vocal in the Floss community is because they\'re somehow afraid. I don\'t believe this at all.\r\n\r\nI think many POC are unaware of many FLOSS technological tools...but so are lots of other people who are not black, brown, or women. Being ignorant or unaware of something does NOT make you afraid !\r\n\r\nI\'m sure your family was apprehensive of being part of that Great Migration; but they did it! So did millions of other African Americans. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Migration_%28African_American%29\r\n\r\nPOC consume a lot of technical information just like any other folks in America. They use computers, cell phones tablets...etc. Additionally, they spend lots of money on tech related items. \r\nTech companies want POC communities (all communities for that matter) to consume their products. They have no interest in these communities participating in its implementation.\r\n\r\nFor instance, Are we to believe that Apple couldn\'t hire a POC as part of their QA team for their watches ??\r\nhttps://thegrio.com/2015/05/01/apple-watch-dark-skin/','2021-02-16 20:09:31'),
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(3108,3262,'2021-02-15 21:55:13','blizzack','Systematically kept out - part 2','I think the main reason you don\'t see People of Color (POC) in the floss community is the same reason you don\'t see lots of black folks in lots of other industries. POC have been purposefully kept out of tech jobs in America! It\'s the same reason you don\'t see women in many of these places as well. \r\nI would postulate that \'many\' of the people who contribute to Floss also work in tech in some way or another. (Notice the word \'many\'...not \'all\' or \'most\')\r\n\r\nJust so you know... I\'m black man, US citizen who lives in New York\r\nCity. I work as a software engineer and I\'m also interested in Floss.\r\n\r\nblizzack.com','2021-02-16 20:09:31'),
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(3109,3271,'2021-02-16 15:14:37','thelovebug','Loved this!','Knowing how difficult it can be to engage a small child in front of a microphone without them going all shy, or grabbing hold of it and making farting noises, this was amazing to listen to! Thanks for the entertainment!','2021-02-16 20:09:31'),
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(3110,3241,'2021-02-16 15:20:37','clacke','NoSQL and Redis','Dave said \"this preceded NoSQL I imagine\", and he was referring to key/value stores in general I believe, which are indeed older than relational databases and are a layer on top of which relational databases are built.\r\n\r\nWhen I initially heard it, I thought it referred to Redis specifically, and I thought \"no way, Redis came out in the middle of the NoSQL boom\".\r\n\r\nI was wrong, by two days. :-D\r\n\r\nRedis came out on 2009-05-10 and the term NoSQL in the current sense was coined on 2009-05-12.\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redis\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoSQL#cite_note-20','2021-02-16 20:09:31'),
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(3111,3241,'2021-02-16 15:27:29','clacke','Redis pronunciation','Most people pronounce it /reddis/, not /reedis/.\r\n\r\nIt is often used as a cache to avoid expensive database lookups, much like one would use e.g. memcache, and I\'ve always interpreted the name to hint at \"I don\'t need to make that heavy multiple-tables join, because I know I already \'read this\' just a moment ago\".\r\n\r\nI\'ve never looked up what the official story of the name is.','2021-02-16 20:09:32'),
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(3112,3272,'2021-02-17 11:33:42','bookewyrmm','welcome','Hearing Your linux journey was like hearing someone read mine aloud. Though, my journey started a few years before yours. The win98/ME migration was my nudge to look into alternate operating systems. Like you, most of the communities I have encountered have been very friendly and helpful, I\'ve not delved into the ARCH world, but have encountered that type attitude elsewhere. Eletism exists everywhere, how we react to it is up to us. \r\n\r\nThat aside, welcome to one of the best communities on the web.','2021-02-17 22:06:42'),
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(3113,3241,'2021-02-17 22:15:06','Dave Morriss','Key/value storage','Hi Clacke,\r\n\r\nWhat I couldn\'t recall at the time was the name Berkely DB. I used this for a while when it was owned by a company called Sleepycat. Later it was bought by Oracle.\r\n\r\nWe were OpenLDAP users at the university I worked at, and this ran on top of Berkely DB files. I failed to remember all of this in the show itself of course :-)','2021-02-17 22:17:12'),
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(3114,3274,'2021-02-19 11:34:14','mcnalu','Might return to dwm','Enjoyed this episode which I began listening to and then switched over to the video version.\r\n\r\nI used dwm as my main desktop many years ago, perhaps 8 or so, and it brought my rather underpowered laptop alive. In the end I abandoned dwm because I had to use netbeans everyday and for reasons I never understood it wouldn\'t work with dwm. I\'m back with KDE again for now - yes, I like extremes! - but you\'ve nudged me into giving down another whirl.','2021-02-20 09:44:17'),
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(3115,2356,'2021-02-23 21:27:06','Leo_B','If you\'re watching this in 2021','Do yourself a favor and run this guys fork of the script...\r\nhttps://github.com/stevesaner/pi-sdcard-setup\r\n\r\nIt removes some of the checksum complexities and other things that confuse the original setup.\r\n\r\nGreat episode and lots of good management tools through this approach.','2021-02-24 22:31:01'),
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(3116,2356,'2021-02-25 12:02:01','Ken Fallon','Updated versions','Absolutely please use https://github.com/stevesaner/pi-sdcard-setup script.\r\n\r\nSince posting this show, there has been a follow up episode\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=3173\r\n\r\nThe script mentioned here is now been maintained on github at \r\nhttps://github.com/kenfallon/fix-ssh-on-pi','2022-02-14 13:25:15'),
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(3117,3241,'2021-03-03 12:05:34','clacke','OpenLDAP on BDB?','I didn\'t know OpenLDAP originally ran on BDB! These days it uses its own LMDB, which has also replaced BDB in many other places.\r\n\r\nTurns out, OpenLDAP started using BDB in 2002 and LMDB wasn\'t ready until 2011. In the middle of the NoSQL boom! :-)\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLDAP\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Memory-Mapped_Database','2021-03-03 21:39:23'),
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(3118,3153,'2021-03-03 12:33:21','Ken Fallon','Thanks Again.','Amazing how many times I\'ve needed to use this.','2021-03-03 21:39:23'),
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(3119,3262,'2021-03-08 13:55:44','bjhend','Get rid of bad terms in IT','Thanks for sharing your thoughts and feelings about bad terms in IT. I\'ve better understood now, what they may cause, so you got me to finally rename the default branches of all Git repositories in my organization I\'m responsible for.\r\n\r\nI\'ve written an internal blog post about that, linking to this HPR episode. Hope that others will follow my example.','2021-03-08 19:46:23'),
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(3120,3292,'2021-03-09 16:46:41','Ken Fallon','Good Question','Yes lynx can be used to upload to HPR. Just tried it and it works fine.\r\n\r\nIf you are leaving comments and get an error, please email me and I can see what\'s causing it.\r\n\r\nFor old or future shows, we have extra checks.\r\n\r\n1) A difficult question related to what the P in HPR means.\r\n2) Deselect the \"I am a spammer\" tick box.\r\n3) Fill in the name of the host (you on this page)\r\n4) And tell us something to prove you are not a spammer. \r\nI\'m using \"Watch out that Squirrel is running 32 bit\" for this one.','2021-03-09 20:55:39'),
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(3121,3291,'2021-03-15 11:53:07','RmccurdyDOTcom','audio','with ffmpg and VLC you can get everything done you need likely...\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/How%20to%20speed%20up%20/%20slow%20down%20a%20video\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nffmpeg -i input.mkv -filter:v \"minterpolate=\'mi_mode=mci:mc_mode=aobmc:vsbmc=1:fps=120\'\" output.mkv','2021-03-15 19:55:31'),
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(3122,3292,'2021-03-16 17:01:16','A listener','Enjoyed the podcast, but...','The coffee slurping noises and throat clearing distracts from what is an enjoyable podcast. And, for someone who mentions that HPR is apolitical, you spent a lot of time talking about fascism and cancel culture.','2021-03-16 19:08:04'),
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(3123,3282,'2021-03-18 00:12:55','frank','Using your OEM Windows key in a VM','Hi there,\r\n\r\nI’m afraid I may have to dampen your expectations here. These days, the Windows license key (at least the OEM ones, meaning those that are imposed on you when you buy hardware) is usually tied to the hardware, i.e. the BIOS or whatever chip. I don’t think It will be accepted inside a VM.\r\n\r\nYour best use for the drive would be to pop it into an external case and use it as mobile storage or as a backup drive. (Or leave it bare if you have a hot-swap adapter) That’s what I did with the HDD that came in my Thinkpad. When that arrived 5 years ago, I only did a short boot-up because I was curious about Windows 10. So I had my first (and for many years only) contact with that. I then swapped the drive out for a 3rd party SSD (also from Crucial) straight away.\r\n\r\nRegarding your RAM peculiarity, I’m not sure but it sounds like those missing 2 GB are siphoned off for the internal graphics.','2021-03-18 22:40:48'),
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(3124,3292,'2021-03-18 15:27:18','Kevin O\'Brien','Thank you','I gather you won\'t see it, but thank you for the kind words. I look forward to more shows from you.','2021-03-18 22:40:48'),
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(3125,3299,'2021-03-25 16:06:25','nobody','Other MAC implementations','In the episode you weren\'t quite sure if there are other MACs for Linux beside SELinux and AppArmor and indeed, there are!\r\n\r\nThere is Smack which is quite uninteresting as it\'s just an another label based MAC, similar to SELinux.\r\n\r\nTo me the interesting one is TOMOYO which started as a pathname based filesystem similar to AppArmor but later started differentiating between applications based on their process invocation history. This means you can apply different policies on say /bin/sh depending on the chain of execution leading to it (kernel -> init -> getty -> login -> sh VS kernel -> init -> sshd -> sh). While this is also possible in AppArmor it is quite a lot more manual work and more difficult to reason about.\r\n\r\nTOMOYO also has much nicer tools than either of the more well known MACs. SELinux has given MAC a bad name as being hard and laborious to manage. If instead of SELinux people would be first introduced to TOMOYO they would probably be much more inclined to implement a MAC.','2021-03-25 21:50:58'),
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(3126,3298,'2021-03-25 18:38:09','Windigo','Agreed','Well said! I\'ll never understand why people feel entitled to attack those donating the results of their hard work. If I don\'t like a piece of free software, I can skip it and support the ones I do.','2021-03-25 21:50:58'),
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(3127,3296,'2021-03-25 20:25:38','Kevin O\'Brien','Great show!','I really enjoy these shows where people show how they defeat the bad guys. I hope there are more war stories to come.','2021-03-25 21:50:58'),
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(3128,3291,'2021-03-26 01:24:07','Gumnos','Which hardware podcast player did you move to?','hey, I was a long-time fan of the Sansa Clip as well and managed to eventually kill both the ones I owned (and had put RockBox on). When I went to look for a 3rd one, they were outlandishly expensive. I couldn\'t suss out the make/model of the one you switched to.','2021-03-26 22:01:46'),
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(3129,3291,'2021-03-27 13:15:58','Kevin O\'Brien','Your answer','The one I bought was called Klangtop, which I found on Amazon. I just looked, and now I don\'t see it, but I see something that looks identical under the name AGPTek. My guess is that they are all manufactured by a Chinese manufacturer as OEMs for various companies.','2021-03-27 20:30:53'),
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(3130,3292,'2021-03-27 16:36:06','Thaj','Well...','I\'m canceling this episode you the only valid reason, slurping your drink in my ear at high volume. :)','2021-03-27 20:30:54'),
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(3131,3303,'2021-04-01 12:24:33','Zen_floater2','Bravo','An excellent show sir. \r\nSomeday, I will try and put Slackware 13 on my older chromebook.','2021-04-01 20:45:33'),
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(3132,3317,'2021-04-02 09:12:22','clacke','Errata','Apparently the term open source was not quite coined at that meeting described in the opensource.com article, people had been using it in a software context (not just the well-known military intelligence context) some time before then:\r\n\r\nhttps://web.archive.org/web/20180315075903/hyperlogos.org/blog/drink/term-Open-Source\r\n\r\n/via https://fosstodon.org/@be/105994362194990430','2021-04-02 20:18:52'),
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(3133,3291,'2021-04-03 23:39:33','brother mouse','audacity batch','I use \"sox\" in linux scripts to automate stuff like speeding up audio, removing long periods of silence, etc:\r\n\r\n# adjust speed\r\nsox input.wav output.wav tempo [value]','2021-04-04 18:04:07'),
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(3134,3305,'2021-04-05 15:51:52','Kevin O\'Brien','Adding my endorsement','I loved hearing the mention of my friend Michael W. Lucas. He is a great writer, and his technical books are are awesome. I used his book on SSH as a resource when I did my shows on that topic. He also writes some pretty good fiction, such as \"git-commit murder\".','2021-04-05 19:26:10'),
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(3135,3308,'2021-04-09 18:07:33','Henry','Got some good tips ... thank you','I routinely encourage people to disable automatic image download for privacy reasons, but never thought of your idea to habitually view emails in plain text. I\'m going to do that.\r\n\r\nThe idea of running rules before spam processing seems obvious after you hear it. My spouse is constantly losing important emails in the junk folder.','2021-04-09 19:13:17'),
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(3136,3311,'2021-04-12 16:58:50','brian-in-ohio','bravery','Agree or disagree with RMS, at least we he does not hide his beliefs behind the moniker \'anonymous \'.','2021-04-12 20:13:27'),
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(3137,3311,'2021-04-13 07:53:02','Ken Fallon','Long history of supporting anonymous posts','Hi brian-in-ohio,\r\n\r\nThe only requirement for posting to HPR is that the show is \"of interest to Hackers\". (And isn\'t spam, and meets the licensing terms). There is no requirement to be personally identified on HPR.\r\n\r\nWhile some contributors like myself use their real names, others like yourself use handles instead. I\'m sure most of those who use handles do not do so to hide their identity - but some might. \r\n\r\nIt\'s a moot point anyway because we know Bradley M. Kuhn was the author of the show. We don\'t know who posted it, but I don\'t particularly care. They could have posted the show under a fake user name and we would never know. There are quite a lot of shows posted that were controversial at the time, and were submitted by a host that never posted again. \r\n\r\nI feel that posting under the Anonymous username is more honest. It alerts the HPR community to the lack of implicit trust that comes with a (fake) real name. (It also means less work for the janitors as we don\'t need to create new users :-) )\r\n\r\nIn any event, Hacker Public Radio has long supported, and will continue to support anonymous posts, comments and other forms of interactions. We do this for many reasons, not least of which is that freedom of speech is not always without cost. \r\n\r\nKen.','2021-04-13 19:36:33'),
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(3138,3296,'2021-04-13 09:40:49','rtsn','nice','Very interesting episode. I didn\'t know about this technique. I guess there is an irony in that by publishing this spam bot makers might eventually get around to implementing ways to defeat this in the long run.\r\n\r\nI would love a followup episode on this, how it worked out over time and such.\r\n\r\nKeep up the good fight and thanks for a good episode.','2021-04-13 19:36:33'),
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(3139,3311,'2021-04-13 20:50:23','Reto','RMS','Hi,\r\n\r\nFirst of all this TTS (text to speech) voice is terrible I can hardly understand it, the one used by HPR is much better.\r\n\r\nSecondly, if I hear some information where I get the impression it is totally on one side, I want to hear the other side in order to build my opinon.\r\nTook me 20 minutes to find it, the other side, looks like the internet tries to hide it: https://debian.community/molly-de-blanc-arrest-and-prosecution-for-cyberbullying/\r\n\r\nHave you seen the episode of \"The Orville\" where your reputation and punishment is based on public opinion rather than from a court? It was scary! \r\nWhile this was fiction, does it now become reality and do you support this?\r\n\r\nJust some thoughts on what is going on here.','2021-04-14 15:58:02'),
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(3140,3311,'2021-04-14 16:02:00','Ken Fallon','Interview with RMS/FSF ?','Hi Reto,\r\n\r\nThe TTS (text to speech) engine used is espeak, and is available on many linux distros. It is relied upon by thousands with visual impairments, and those with reading disabilities - myself included. You must be new to HPR as we have been using espeak for years, and were only recently able to negotiate a contract with Lyn (text2wave/festival) after her noncompete-agreements from the lottalinuxlinks.com podcast expired ;-).\r\n\r\nUnfortunately the site you posted left me wanting when it came to hearing the other side of the story. But as you say it can be difficult to find accurate information on the Internet, especially one that is reliable and trustworthy. I would always suggest to go to the source of truth first. In this case it\'s best to start with Richard Stallman and the Free Software Foundation (FSF) itself. Sure enough on the main FSF page there are two articles \"Statement of FSF board on election of Richard Stallman\"[1] and another \"RMS addresses the free software community\"[2]\r\n\r\nWe have interviewed RMS on episode hpr0271[3] and hpr1116[4], so it would be great to get him on again to discuss this. Can you reach out to him and/or the FSF to see if they would be interested in recording another interview ? Be sure to mention we only use Free Software for the recording [5], and that we can release it under the CC-BY-NC-SA[6] if desired. I think the whole \"not release in mp3\" thing is no longer a problem, but if it is we can deal with that as well.\r\n\r\nIn the meantime I will put together a similar show to this using their statements, and post it as a counter point show.','2021-04-14 20:58:51'),
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(3141,3311,'2021-04-14 16:02:12','Ken Fallon','Interview with RMS/FSF ? - links','- [1] https://www.fsf.org/news/statement-of-fsf-board-on-election-of-richard-stallman\r\n- [2] https://www.fsf.org/news/rms-addresses-the-free-software-community\r\n- [3] https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=0271 hpr0271 :: Stallman on Free Beer\r\n- [4] https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1116 hpr1116 :: Interview with Richard Stallman\r\n- [5] https://hackerpublicradio.org/recording.php#round_table\r\n-','2022-02-14 13:25:16'),
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(3142,3311,'2021-04-14 22:15:31','Beeza','Richard Stallman','Few of us are so synomymous with the organisation we work for that any controversial remarks we make in public are likely to do lasting damage to the reputation of said organisation - especially if we were to subsequently resign and remain silent afterwards. That is not the case with RMS with regards to the FSF. He will forever be associated with the free software movement and, by implication, the FSF.\r\n\r\nOn that basis engineering his resignation on the strength of his comments on social and political issues did nothing to protect the reputation of the free software movement. All it achieved was to salve the consciences of the other FSF board members. How damaged was the free software movement anyway?\r\n\r\nMost people outside the FLOSS world have never heard of RMS so his sometimes distasteful, but sometimes thought-provoking views would have no bearing on their decisions to adopt open source software.\r\n\r\nPeople in the FLOSS world know RMS for his eccentricities, along with his visionary genius. I suspect that while many publicly feign shock at his outbursts, for most it is just \"RMS being RMS\" followed by an attempt to get any images conjured up by some of his ideas out of their heads.\r\n\r\nIf the FSF fundamentally stands for anything it is freedom, so to sideline somebody for exercising their right to personal opinions and free speech seems a bit incongruous. Given that getting rid of RMS was never going to distance the FSF from him, they would have been better to have taken the view - even in the form of public statements if necessary - that other FSF board members abhor some of his views on non-technical matters but totally support his right to hold and express those views. In these days of \"cancel culture\" when people are dismissed from jobs or prevented from speaking in public for fear of what they might say it would have been a refreshing change to see an organisation defending the right to free speech instead of just taking the path of least resistance.','2021-04-15 19:55:49'),
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(3143,3311,'2021-04-16 01:10:58','Torao','Stallman','Nobody is saying Stallman can\'t say having \"consensual\" sex with a 12 year old doesn\'t harm the kid. But nobody who isn\'t actually brain damaged should defend it nor is anybody actually forced to associate with him because of \"free speech\". It doesn\'t violate any free speech value to say you can believe whatever despicable things you want, you can advocate for any despicable thing you want, but nobody else is obligated to support you or be allied with you. It\'s not cancel culture. It\'s being responsible for the ignorance he spews culture. \r\n\r\nAs for how the FSF is damaged for it, look at how many organizations have pulled their support. Nobody is bigger than an organization unless the organization allows itself to be subsumed to a cult of personality. It rarely works out well. Part of the reason that the FSF is useless is because they have allowed themselves to be so beholden to a useless repugnant toad like Stallman who pushes a majority of people away. If you want an idea to grow, it helps not to be led by somebody who intentionally spews reprehensible nonsense that pushes everybody else away. Stallman is a toxic excuse for a human being. You want Floss to have a chance to grow? Don\'t let it be led by a guy who intentionally says things that are considered morally repugnant by the majority of the public.','2021-04-16 20:23:04'),
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(3144,3301,'2021-04-17 09:30:34','Aaronb','Have you seen xkcd about Kerbal','Very Clever\r\nhttps://xkcd.com/1356/','2021-04-17 19:51:13'),
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(3145,3311,'2021-04-19 19:45:40','Cfish','The responsibility of leadership','I have been a a GNU/Linux user for around 2.5 year now and I have been a fan of RMS for much of that time. I have heard about people thinking Stallman is kind of weird, but chalked it up to differences in political opinion, or his refusal to meet people where they are. This is my first time hearing about some of his gross opinions.\r\nAs a leader in the free software movement, he should NOT be turning people away with these opinions. To be perfectly clear, I stand with the survivors of sexual assault, and I stand with anyone who has put their trust in the supervision of an adult who would betray that trust for sexual gratification.\r\nThe GNU/Linux community is a better place when we treat each other respectfully and with compassion. We don\'t need any one person in our community as much as we need the community itself.','2021-04-20 19:02:51'),
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(3146,3317,'2021-04-20 14:34:34','Cfish','Great show','Thanks for this. I knew there were people in FOSS who felt the way I do, but this is the first I am hearing about a public declaration.','2021-04-20 19:02:52'),
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(3147,3318,'2021-04-21 12:49:23','Ken Fallon','sdcard and a usbstick','What threw me for a loop was that there is a sdcard - vfat that goes into the front. Then there is a usbstick that goes into the back. \r\n\r\nOther than that worked as described.','2021-04-21 22:06:54'),
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(3148,3318,'2021-04-21 23:29:15','archer72','Re: sdcard and a usbstick','Good to know this worked for you as well. I think original youtube post was meant for backup of a ton of games. In most cases, this will not be needed because the games don\'t take much room anyways.','2021-04-22 21:00:59'),
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(3149,3317,'2021-04-22 15:53:58','Kevin O\'Brien','Fantastic show!!!','My great thanks to Clacke for posting this. I think this manifesto is a great contribution to the discussion of free software. If free software is not respecting of people, what good is it?','2021-04-22 21:00:59'),
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(3150,3319,'2021-04-23 12:30:36','Ken Fallon','AI is misleading AP would be better','I always thought that artificial intelligence is misleading. Artificial programming would better describe what\'s going on.','2021-04-23 20:19:27'),
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(3151,3321,'2021-04-26 12:39:59','Thaj','Mission accomplished','The Urandom Podcast, spawning HPR episodes and shameless promotion simultaneously since 2021. Seriously though, great job. I have a MUCH better understanding of DNS66 after listening to this. Good job.','2021-04-26 19:15:38'),
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(3152,3320,'2021-04-26 19:04:20','Aaronb','Listening to Twit podcasts','How I listen to the Twit network podcasts. Many MP3 players and podcast apps on your phone have us sleep timer.\r\nGetting a easy chair, lean it all way back. Cover up nice and cozy. Turn your volume down just until just before you can not understand what they\'re talking about. Set the sleep timer for about 12 minutes. My podcasting app will turn the volume down even more the last 30 seconds so it\'s not an abrupt shut off. Now you\'re ready for the best nap you\'ve had in a long time. My MP3 player is an old moto E3.','2021-04-26 19:15:38'),
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(3153,3317,'2021-04-28 18:23:14','clacke','A season for manifestos','There has been a lot of bubbling out there in the free software world since a decade or more and it\'s recently coming to the surface. I have two more of these readings coming out as soon as I have put together the background material.\r\n\r\nSneak peek:\r\n - https://techautonomy.org/ (2020)\r\n - https://opensourcedesign.net/manifesto/ (2014)','2021-04-28 19:12:25'),
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(3154,3317,'2021-04-29 14:16:12','Kevin O\'Brien','Keep it up','Glad to hear it, clacke. I look forward to your shows.','2021-04-29 21:05:52'),
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(3155,3324,'2021-04-29 21:04:14','Xoke','GRRRRR!','Well now I have to do a reply episode on my favourite infosec podcasts...','2021-04-29 21:05:52'),
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(3156,3324,'2021-05-01 14:59:49','Kevin O\'Brien','Really liked the show','It is great to hear about the podcasts you follow. I recognize many of them as shows I used to follow, though frankly since I retired I have been putting my energy into other matters. I\'m turning 70 in a few months and have other priorities now.','2021-05-01 18:41:13'),
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(3157,3317,'2021-05-01 15:43:06','Aaron C','Raises an excellent point','I\'m just commenting to say that this manifesto and subsequent show makes an excellent point. The free software community as it stands has good and as discussed well guarded principles with no compromise. While this is admirable it is also what is killing the movement. \r\n\r\nLike language all movements must eventually morph or evolve over time or they die off, it is completely acceptable to maintain a core set of tenets of course, but having a figurehead who uses the internet in bizarre and arcane ways makes free software like more a paranoid nest of conspiracy theorists than it does to make technological progress by freeing the user from the constraints of mega corporations. \r\n\r\nFree software is inevitably political but the mocking and jeering of people who still use proprietary software scared off companies and created the open source movement, which if anything made it easier for mega corporations to profit off of the collectivised free labour of programmers who cared enough to donate their time.\r\n\r\nTo me the free software stalwarts were the progenitors of their own worst enemy, which is open source. They allowed it to happen themselves and fostered the likes of Google and Facebook. The FSF concentrates too much on acting like a single-state communist party with it\'s attention focused on creating a cult of personality around Stallman. \r\n\r\nI agree the roots of the movement today should reflect more social needs, creating software for the good of the people even if that makes software socialist.','2021-05-01 18:41:13'),
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(3158,3297,'2021-05-02 12:48:18','ychaouche','safe ?','What if an updated app isn\'t compatible with current nextcloud version ?','2021-05-02 18:47:20'),
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(3159,3328,'2021-05-05 19:49:39','b-yeezi','Another great show','Thanks for another great show. I look forward to your next one.\r\n\r\nAs to your use of `pd.apply` in lieu of `np.select`, here\'s my 2 cents:\r\n\r\nApply is more readable in most cases, but select is more performant. When performance matters, or when the dataset is very large, you might want to use `np.select`. For instance, when using `np.select` on your example here, the output was 10x faster on my PC.\r\n\r\n```\r\n%timeit df.apply(Scorelevel, axis=1)\r\n\r\n448 µs ± 2.88 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000 loops each)\r\n```\r\n\r\n```\r\n%timeit np.select(cond_list, choice_list, default=\'Require Activation\')\r\n\r\n55.6 µs ± 440 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000 loops each)\r\n```\r\n\r\nIn many cases, the readability can trump the need for speed, but just wanted to give a counter-point.','2021-05-05 19:59:08'),
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(3160,3328,'2021-05-05 19:58:07','b-yeezi','One more speed gain','If you really want to fly, you can turn the pandas series to numpy arrays first. For you example, it got twice as 2x faster than regular `np.select`.\r\n\r\nExample:\r\n```\r\ncond_list = [df[\'Score\'].values >= 9,\r\n((df[\'Score\'].values >= 8) & (df[\'Score\'].values < 9)),\r\n((df[\'Score\'].values >= 7) & (df[\'Score\'].values < 8)),\r\n((df[\'Score\'].values >= 6) & (df[\'Score\'].values < 7)),\r\n((df[\'Score\'].values >= 5) & (df[\'Score\'].values < 6)),\r\n((df[\'Score\'].values >= 4) & (df[\'Score\'].values < 5))]\r\n\r\n%timeit np.select(cond_list, choice_list, default=\'Require Activation\')\r\n23.5 µs ± 1.74 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10000 loops each)\r\n```','2021-05-05 19:59:08'),
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(3161,3331,'2021-05-10 18:09:31','Trey','Great episode. Thanks for the advice.','Looking forward to the next episodes in this series.','2021-05-10 19:31:54'),
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(3162,3336,'2021-05-11 21:01:56','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank Dave Morris for fixing the show notes.\r\n\r\nThanks Dave','2021-05-11 21:07:00'),
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(3163,3342,'2021-05-11 21:04:27','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank kwisher for running the stream for the new years show.\r\n\r\n\r\nThanks','2021-05-11 21:07:00'),
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(3164,3346,'2021-05-11 21:06:53','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank Ken Fallon for his job recording this podcast. It was because of his fine recording of the stream that this podcast happened. \r\n\r\nThank you','2021-05-11 21:09:35'),
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(3165,3352,'2021-05-11 21:10:03','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank the entire hacker public radio community for participating in the new years show.\r\n\r\nThanks','2021-05-11 21:12:48'),
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(3166,3356,'2021-05-11 21:13:59','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank Dan from tllts for playing the promo for the new years show in the tllts podcast.\r\n\r\nThank you','2021-05-11 21:36:50'),
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(3167,3361,'2021-05-11 21:15:42','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank the members of the urandom podcast for having me and kwisher on to promote the new years show. \r\n\r\n\r\nThank you','2021-05-11 21:36:50'),
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(3168,3366,'2021-05-11 21:18:45','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank Pokey for coming up with the idea for the new years show. Without this show I don\'t think I would have ever had the courage to start podcasting\r\n\r\nThank you','2021-05-11 21:36:51'),
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(3169,3372,'2021-05-11 21:22:07','Honkeymagoo','Thanking','I would like to thank everyone who joined in the podcast. Without people coming on and talking there would be no podcast. \r\n\r\nThank you, and I look forward to talking to everyone again next new years','2021-05-11 21:36:51'),
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(3170,3337,'2021-05-18 12:49:32','mpardo','mpardohpr@gmail.com','It is the most enjoyable article that I have ever read (with the possible exception of those that might have been more enjoyable).\r\n\r\nAn excellent dramatic reading as well.\r\n\r\n\r\nCheers!','2021-05-18 19:08:44'),
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(3171,2499,'2021-05-19 14:29:18','Dave (thelovebug)','Coming to this late, but wow!','Having just joined the ranks of Amateur Radio users, it made sense for me to look for HPR episodes relating to Amateur Radio.\r\n\r\nI loved this episode, very interesting listening to conversations on the 40m band... real hard-core users on 7MHz!\r\n\r\nI did notice that the German station DF2BO wasn\'t using the NATO Phonetic Alphabet, is this a common occurrence?','2021-05-19 19:31:25'),
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(3172,2499,'2021-05-29 17:22:56','MrX','Re: Coming to this late, but wow!','Hi Dave sorry for taking a bit of time to reply. I noticed the comment flag up in my RSS reader and then promptly forgot all about it as things have been crazy busy here. I only remembered thanks to a gentle prod by Dave Morriss. \r\n\r\nGlad you enjoyed the show. By coincidence I turned my HF set on just last week something I hadn’t done for a good long while. I must admit to being a bit rusty with the latest rules and regulations but I seem to remember that certainly here in the UK you are encouraged to use the NATO Phonetic Alphabet. I’ve certainly heard various stations using different Phonetics. Perhaps they think it’s easier to hear under noisy conditions or perhaps they just like the sound of it. Personally I just stick with the NATO Phonetic Alphabet.\r\n\r\nDave mentioned you recently became an Amateur, so many congratulations. I’m sure you’ll have lots of fun with the hobby as there are so many directions it can take you.\r\n\r\nAll the best\r\n\r\nMrX','2021-05-29 18:02:26'),
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(3173,3348,'2021-06-02 05:24:23','HawkinsTheWizard','hpr3348 feedback','I have been wanting to comment about this for some time.\r\nThe quality of the audio is somewhat important but not a qualifier.\r\nBut what I at least WANT is the level of volume to be normalised at 95%. Its hard to hear in a noisy environment like a car or places with background noise.\r\nThis is easy for a submitted sample. Run all input/submits through a normaliser/compressor.\r\nVolume checks in mumble/radio should also normalise.','2021-06-02 21:45:26'),
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(3174,3348,'2021-06-02 14:22:04','Dave Morriss','I was trying to remember \"This American Life\"','Listening to this I have remembered what I was complaining about in the show. I was referring to podcasts (and presumably radio shows) like \"This American Life\" which \"interview\" people but \"translate\" what they are saying over the top of them.\r\n\r\nThis is a \"style\" that many broadcasters seem to have adopted. Many of the BBC podcasts I have stopped listening to do this too. I find it distracting and insulting to the interviewee. It seems to be an example of media people reinterpreting what experts are saying in many cases, and we know how much misinformation comes from this practice. \r\n\r\nIf this is \"professional\" I don\'t want to have anything to do with it!','2021-06-02 21:45:26'),
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(3175,3343,'2021-06-02 17:42:34','cagey','My experience with Forth (at SAO)','Interesting show! I was a grad student in Arizona working with the gamma-ray group at SAO\'s Whipple Observatory (just south of Tucson). My first task was to develop a tracking system for the 10m Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope. We used Forth running on a Z-80 daughter board hosted by an Apple II. This same hardware was used to control a 24\" telescope. That system was developed by a fellow who had worked for SAO\'s Satellite Tracking Program. In fact, several other staff members at Whipple had traveled the planet installing, operating and maintaining the Baker-Nunn cameras used to photograph satellites and determine their orbital elements.\r\n\r\nThe amusing thing is that a couple of years after I graduated they replaced the Apple II with a PC and tried to reverse engineer the Forth code. Given that the tracking code wasn\'t all that complicated this was sheer insanity. My experience with Forth is that even your own code became rapidly inscrutable. Probably a reflection of my coding acumen at the time rather than Forth intself.','2021-06-02 21:45:26'),
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(3176,3345,'2021-06-02 23:27:48','archer72','Another great episode.','Thanks for continuing this series. \r\nThe samples of type of equalization were enlightening.\r\n\r\nAlso there are now no crickets (from Urandom oggcast).','2021-06-03 18:18:37'),
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(3177,3263,'2021-06-03 22:59:32','archer72','Welcome to HPR','Hi o9l. A few months late, but welcome.\r\nLife has a way of getting away from us.\r\n\r\nLook forward to your next show, and don\'t\r\nworry too much about how you sound.','2021-06-04 20:43:05'),
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(3178,3329,'2021-06-05 15:15:09','Ken Fallon','Who ?','Could you add the names and contact pages for the participants as a comment please.','2021-06-05 18:54:26'),
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(3179,3343,'2021-06-06 09:21:20','Dave Morriss','What does SAO stand for?','I did a bit of searching and found that SAO = Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory\r\n\r\nThere\'s a Wikipedia page at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian_Astrophysical_Observatory\r\n\r\nThe comment from cagey is a show all in its own right! I\'d love to hear more about life as a grad student doing this kind of stuff :-)','2021-06-06 18:07:01'),
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(3180,3345,'2021-06-08 13:10:37','Trey','Thank you.','While I am still using a headset microphone and planning to get a good dynamic mic soon, I tried to apply some subtle EQ enhancements to tm latest HPR recording, based on your recommendations in this episode. It is scheduled to air at the end of June (hpr3368).\r\n\r\nKeep up the awesome work!','2021-06-08 19:09:14'),
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(3181,3353,'2021-06-09 17:37:35','FXB','Good listening.','Long time linux user, I but can fully sympathise with much of SGOTI\'s experience, seems to be a similar pattern in how many of us learn to use the command line.\r\n\r\nReally well explained though, will make excellent listening for anyone new to the linux command line who finds it \'scary\'.\r\n\r\nGood stuff man, look forward to hearing more.','2021-06-09 21:08:27'),
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(3182,3353,'2021-06-09 21:23:15','jezra','Hey, that\'s how I learned!','Wonderful show. It was an absolute delight to hear your command-line adventure. If there is one thing I have learned about the command-line in my years of computing, it is that there is always more to learn about the command-line. :)','2021-06-09 21:26:08'),
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(3183,3353,'2021-06-11 01:33:39','Trey','Well done! Keep up the great work!','I have been using various flavors of *nix since the \'80s, and I am still learning things. Your detailed and careful explanations are great for a beginner and even interesting to folks like me.\r\n\r\nDon\'t worry about being new. You are learning methodically and are sharing what you learn with others. That is ALWAYS to be commended. Thank you!','2021-06-11 18:43:18'),
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(3184,3353,'2021-06-11 09:57:38','archer72','Good to hear this one','Long time linux user, but still learning.\r\nI will definitely go back and listen again.\r\n\r\nTwo packages you might try are nnn and ranger, which are terminal application file managers. They both have good uses, just a different approach and keybindings.\r\n\r\nLook forward hearing more.','2021-06-11 18:43:18'),
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(3185,3356,'2021-06-14 22:23:44','Kevin O\'Brien','Nice show, but too long','I do really enjoy hearing the New Year\'s Eve shows, but this one was 282 minutes long! That isi most of the way to 5 hours. I\'d have divided this into 4 shows, each of which would be a bit over an hour.','2021-06-15 18:04:26'),
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(3186,3353,'2021-06-16 22:54:39','Some Guy On The Internet','Giving Thanks.','Thank you all for the encouragement and kind words. I\'ll try to provide more shows on this and other topics. Has anyone had any issues with the sound quality or volume for the episode? Just a QA. check.','2021-06-17 18:09:15'),
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(3187,3353,'2021-06-19 06:19:12','sesamemucho','Nice','A fine show with good audio, as have been all your shows.\r\n\r\nI enjoyed the clear presentation. Always like hearing different ways to use the command line.\r\n\r\nThanks','2021-06-19 18:47:39'),
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(3188,3342,'2021-06-24 15:37:43','crvs','thank you for the reminder','listening to this reminded me that I never actually listened to the interview with ken\'s isp!','2021-06-24 19:36:54'),
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(3189,3357,'2021-06-29 12:47:32','bjb','hpr3357 :: My terminal journey, part 02. - feedback/comment','I loved listening to your talk - as a long-time debian-based distro user I learned some things about apt - thank you - plus the recording was well done (good sound levels, clear, no background noise) and you explain things really well. Thanks! Having the show notes is an extra nice bonus.','2021-06-29 19:07:57'),
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(3190,3353,'2021-06-30 10:16:07','frank','Comments and feedback on your show (part 1)','Hey some guy,\r\n\r\nRegarding your surprise about pwd: I don\'t know the actual history, your assumption of a minimal prompt might be true. However, pwd is also very handy for scripting. Bear in mind that scripts don\'t have a prompt. ;-)\r\n\r\nPretend you are in directory A, and the script is in directory B. So in the terminal you enter B/script to run it. Now within that script, the variable $0 contains that calling string, i.e. B/script. But if you call pwd in that script, it returns A(!). So if you use ./ as path for your dump files, that means that the file will be created at your pwd.\r\n\r\nI often write quick-n-dirty scripts for one-off tasks and they tend to use relative paths for simplicity. In such cases I use the following line at the start of the script:\r\ncd \"$(dirname \"$0\")\"\r\nThis changes the script\'s current directory to where it is actually located. The quotes are there to handle spaces in path names and they are a good habit to acquire. (I\'m kind of a language purist and don\'t like filenames riddled with underscores. I find them hard to read and hard to work with.)','2021-06-30 21:01:23'),
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(3191,3353,'2021-06-30 10:16:59','frank','Comments and feedback on your show (part 2)','(I had to split my comment in two parts because I was getting an error if I did it in one post.)\r\n\r\nAbout bash keyboard shortcuts:\r\nIt is not a default setting in most distros, but I think it was in mine when I started with linux, and now I can\'t live without it. It allows to type a few characters and then, with the page up/down keys, page through all history entries that start with those characters you typed.\r\nFor that, put the following into /etc/inputrc or ~/.inputrc:\r\n\"\\e[5~\": history-search-backward\r\n\"\\e[6~\": history-search-forward\r\n\r\nRegarding grep:\r\nThis comes from the g command of the ed editor, IIRC. \"g\" means \"do the following command globally on the file\" (vim has the :g command which does exactly that), \"re\" is the command to run and means \"match with regular expression\", and \"p\" means \"if it matches, simply print the line\".\r\n\r\nPS.: it is unnecessary to touch a file if you write something to it right after (unless you use the result value of touch for error checking).\r\n\r\nHappy vimming.','2021-06-30 21:01:23'),
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(3192,3368,'2021-07-01 09:15:23','Porkchop','recommendation','I think that those interested in the shows mentioned may also enjoy \"The Layer 8 Podcast\". It is made by Layer8Conference and each episode features a different person with OSInt ties or experiences and they share stories and talk about how they got into the field. It is more entertainment rather than education centered, so someone not familiar with the field can enjoy it and get a better understanding of what OSInt and redteaming are.','2021-07-01 20:15:13'),
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(3193,3369,'2021-07-01 21:00:21','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','I found this discussion fascinating. I also noted that Linus had mentioned the possibility of using Rust for the Linux kernel, and that is not something you hear every day. If some talented programmer out in HPR land wanted to do a series on programming in Rust, I think it would be a big hit.','2021-07-01 21:03:50'),
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(3194,3371,'2021-07-05 11:46:18','frank','A comment on your comment about my comment','Greetings\r\n\r\nIn my comment on the Terminal Journey part 1 I wrote that I had to split my comment because I got an error when I tried to send it in one piece.\r\n\r\nYour reply in this here installment was that postings are limited in length. But that is *not* the problem I had. Yes, I did reach the limit, and I could type no farther. So I fixed my sentences to shorten the post by a little bit and then clicked on Send. But I got an actual error page. So I cut my text in half and then it submitted just fine. I suspect a bug in the form checker or even the backend.\r\n\r\nI do realise there is enough stuff in my head for several shows. I’m working on that concept. :)','2021-07-05 18:03:53'),
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(3195,3368,'2021-07-05 14:37:06','Trey','Thanks for the feedback, Porkchop.','Hi Porkchop,\r\n\r\nI will be adding the Layer 8 podcast to my list. Thanks for the feedback. \r\n\r\nTrey','2021-07-05 18:03:53'),
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(3196,3371,'2021-07-05 14:39:55','Trey','Congrats on joining the Ham community!','Thank you for your positive feedback, and welcome to the Ham Radio community. Looking forward to your podcasts about it, and now I may need to do some myself.\r\n\r\nTrey','2021-07-05 18:03:53'),
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(3197,3371,'2021-07-06 13:41:10','Ken Fallon','Errors in comments','There is a limit on the about of text you can put in this box - endorsed by the maxlength=\"2000\" in HTML. \r\n\r\nThere is also a limit that triggers error \"cd57ab4d7b77a131ed3deb441bd93dcd\" when the server sees that the string length is greater than 2000.\r\n\r\nYou would think that they would be the same, but they are not due to the amount of data required to encode characters. maxlength counts the number of characters, while strlen() is actual data passed. So if you include a \"Smart Quote\" it takes double the space of a normal quote.\r\n\r\n$ echo \'\"\' > double-quote.txt\r\n$ echo \'“\' > double-curley-quote.txt\r\n\r\n$ ls -altr double-curley-quote.txt double-quote.txt | awk \'{print $NF, $5}\'\r\ndouble-quote.txt 2\r\ndouble-curley-quote.txt 4\r\n-rw-rw-r--. 1 ken ken 4 Jul 6 15:23 double-curley-quote.txt\r\n-rw-rw-r--. 1 ken ken 2 Jul 6 15:23 double-quote.txt\r\n\r\nFor a good overview on why this is please see \"Characters, Symbols and the Unicode Miracle - Computerphile\" by Tom Scott on https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MijmeoH9LT4','2021-07-06 19:13:57'),
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(3198,3371,'2021-07-06 19:16:53','b-yeezi','Ranger previously on HPR','https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1756\r\n\r\nI think I\'ll record a follow up episode as well.','2021-07-06 19:22:12'),
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(3199,3357,'2021-07-08 04:21:52','Some Guy On The Internet','apt-mark hold','Perfect time for: \r\n```\r\n$ sudo apt-mark hold audacity; sudo apt-mark showhold\r\n```','2021-07-08 19:30:46'),
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(3200,3367,'2021-07-11 11:52:28','Jon Kulp','Page numbers','I\'ve been away from HPR for ages but checked back in this morning and found this show about ebooks. Loved it, and thanks for the mentions. The discussion about page numbers prompted me to look into the issue because it\'s something that\'s bugged me for a long time. I was pretty sure there was support for specifying page numbers in the EPUB3 standard, but I\'ve never gotten into the weeds and figured it out. For fiction it doesn\'t really matter, but as you discuss, page numbers from the physical books are still pretty important in academia where we are expected to cite our sources. I took a couple of hours this evening and learned how to embed page numbers, and tomorrow I\'ll record a response episode to share how it works. There\'s good news and bad news involved...','2021-07-11 18:01:52'),
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(3201,3377,'2021-07-13 09:43:18','Clinton Roy','Well,','that was..something','2021-07-13 19:21:48'),
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(3202,3367,'2021-07-16 13:37:30','dangerseeker','Fonts and LaTeX','Fonts were a problem for LaTeX in the early days, because Mr. Knuth invented his own (high quality) system to describe fonts.\r\nLater (with PDFlatex, I guess) it became possible to use PostScript fonts directly.\r\nBut PS fonts are expensive, and on Windows PostScript fonts were never really used widely.\r\nAnd then Microsoft \"invented\" TrueType fonts... \r\n\r\nWith ubiquitous cheap (and not always high quality) TTFs there was a growing need to use TTF in LaTeX: It seems like pdflatex can make use of fonts in the TTF format, but I have not tried it myself.\r\n\r\nTODAY luatex/lualatex can not only use TTF but also the even newer OTF fonts with very little problems. It works, but ...\r\n\r\nThe goal of (La)TeX was to produce HIGH QUALITY documents, that\'s why the default is EXTREMELY high quality and changing things is hard.\r\nWith Microsoft products it is the rule to produce VERY LOW QUALITY documents and it is easy to change things to \"comic sans\" or worse...\r\n\r\nWell, with luatex I now can take part in the low quality document revolution. ;-)','2021-07-16 19:05:20'),
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(3203,3381,'2021-07-21 21:47:15','Jon Kulp','Consultant available','I LOVED this episode! Props to you for learning this as an adult, that\'s really cool. It was wonderful hearing about the sensation of euphoria you felt when you first did various maneuvers. It\'s easy for me to forget when this feels like because it happened so long ago for me. I was a competitive skateboarder on halfpipes in the 80s and have a ton of experience, so if you ever need a human being to talk through any of this with, hit me up. It will be fun for me. \r\n\r\nGlad to hear you will be getting some safety equipment, but you did not mention one of the most important safety items, a pair of wrist guards. Most of the time when people fall they put their hands out to catch themselves, and it\'s very easy to break a wrist this way. Get yourself some good wrist guards because because you\'re going to need your hands.\r\n\r\nHave fun and be safe!','2021-07-21 22:12:47'),
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(3204,3381,'2021-07-21 22:12:36','Jon Kulp','Skate Shoes','Forgot to mention: you should not have to pay that much for a decent pair of shoes. A much more affordable option is Converse Chuck Taylor high tops. Those are the shoes I wore until I got my first pair of Vans high tops. The Chuck Taylors have excellent grip on the board, though they don\'t have any ankle padding. If you lace em up nice and tight you get good support against turning your ankle, but they won\'t protect you if your board bangs into your ankle. The Vans high tops are excellent in every respect. I think I got a pair for about $50 several years ago but maybe they cost more now.','2021-07-22 21:05:59'),
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(3205,3383,'2021-07-22 01:47:32','Zen_floater2','Why I love OpenBSD','I love OpenBSD because they produce a secure OS. They also produce the whole OS. You will never see the lead kernel developer at OpenBSD insert a patch for code which was developed by the NSA into the kernel,,,, THEN,,, only withdraw that patch after the entire community forces him to do so..... ...\r\nINTEGRITY,,, SECURITY,,,, CODE CORRECTNESS,,,','2021-07-22 21:06:00'),
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(3206,3388,'2021-07-30 12:05:46','Brian-in-ohio','free speech','So free speech is ok unless the FSFE descides its not ok. Except for RMS\'s quircky behaviour he was never accused of doing anything illegal, he was merely excersing his right, endowed by our Creator, of free speech. His only fail was not realizing that the thought police had invaded the FSF. Down with Big Brother.','2021-07-30 20:10:04'),
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(3207,3390,'2021-07-30 13:56:17','Brian-in-ohio','great show','Really enjoyed this episode. The mixing of computer and personal history was great. Can\'t wait for the next podcast.','2021-07-30 20:10:05'),
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(3208,3390,'2021-07-30 20:35:56','Kevin O\'Brien','You are most welcome','I\'m glad you enjoyed this trip down memory lane. I\'m basically releasing the DOS series shows about every four weeks or so, alternating with my GIMP shows.','2021-07-30 20:44:19'),
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(3209,3394,'2021-08-05 14:54:19','norrist','My one cool xmlstarlet trick','I had to install an xml config file on a bunch of servers.\r\nThe xml was the same for every server except the hostname had to be added to a specific field.\r\n\r\nMy first thought was to use sed, but anyone who has tried parsing xml with regex knows just how far I got.\r\n\r\nSearching for something like sed that understood xml tags led me to xmlstarlet.\r\nHere is the command I used to add the hostname of the server to the xml path \"info/host-id\":\r\n\r\n xmlstarlet ed --inplace -u info/host-id -v `hostname -f` /path/to/info.xml','2021-08-05 18:01:02'),
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(3210,3393,'2021-08-06 01:30:01','Trey','Thank you.','As someone who only occasionally uses XML and other data languages like JSON, your episodes on both topics were very helpful. \r\n\r\nIt is also encouraging to know that there is someone else out there who dispises markdown as much as I do. \r\n\r\nKeep up the great episodes.','2021-08-06 18:05:18'),
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(3211,3382,'2021-08-06 10:17:20','Dave Morriss','I hadn\'t quite appreciated what was happening','Hi MrX,\r\n\r\nExcuse the ignorance, but I hadn\'t appreciated:\r\n(a) what a heat shield is, and \r\n(b) what problem was being solved!\r\n\r\nSo I have found out that a heat shield protects parts of the underside of a car from the heat of the exhaust pipe(s). It\'s a formed sheet of metal that is bolted to the underside of the car.\r\n\r\nThe problem was that the mounting holes in the metal sheet had corroded and become larger than the bolts and washers holding it on, leading to nasty rattling. The metal tin lids with holes drilled in them act as giant washers, holding the shield on again and preventing rattling!\r\n\r\nI realise that this was a great hack - now I understand it!','2021-08-06 18:05:18'),
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(3212,3395,'2021-08-06 20:34:38','norrist','Please do more','It was a lot of fun to listen to how you worked your way through the different exploits. I am looking forward to more.','2021-08-06 20:37:08'),
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(3213,3382,'2021-08-07 21:52:53','MrX','Oops','Hi Dave, oops. I think I have a habit of doing this sort of thing. I can only apologise to yourself and to any potential listener. I’m glad you managed to solve the mystery in the end and to explain it so eloquently. If only I had said something similar in my episode. Must remember in future to engage the brain before engaging the mouth :) \r\n\r\nAll the best MrX','2021-08-08 20:25:30'),
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(3214,3388,'2021-08-07 22:25:51','dragestil','Regarding RMS','The number of signatories of the \"open letter\" is not five or six figures as mentioned in the episode. It is 3004. By contrast, a letter supporting Richard Stallman (https://rms-support-letter.github.io/) gained 6800 signatures. If the FSFE thinks the matter of right or wrong simply depends on how many people are made uncomfortable, it should withdraw its statement with unsubstantiated claims, as there are more people made uncomfortable by the lynch mob than by Richard Stallman.\r\n\r\nSee also https://stallmansupport.org/ for a comprehensive account and context of the drama.','2021-08-08 20:25:30'),
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(3215,3393,'2021-08-07 23:11:13','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','Great show, klaatu! In my previous career as a Project Manager working with big data systems, XML was important for data transfer. For example, in the automitve industry the major manufacturers would insist that suppliers use XML to send data (such as invoices; important!). And in health care it is useful for sending health data.\r\n\r\nAlso, you mentioned DocBook, and I seem to recall seeing you give a presentation on that, and I think it was at Indiana LinuxFest, but if not, probably Ohio LinuxFest. All good stuff.','2021-08-08 20:25:30'),
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(3216,3377,'2021-08-08 05:22:47','Guardian','Lousy sound quality abuses audience.','Sorry but running the water while recording is a real F-U to your audience. I hope we will never be subjected to another HPR episode that does that. One was way too many IMO.','2021-08-08 20:25:30'),
|
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|
(3217,3331,'2021-08-08 21:00:54','bjb','Question about mic positioning','Thanks for a great episode - needless to say the audio is great : -) also the topic is interesting and useful. I\'m just coming back to the podcasts and listening to some older shows.\r\n\r\nRe: avoiding sibilant and popping sounds - and \"angling the mic\" - do we move the mic 20 degrees off to the side - or vertically? Do we move the mic position in 3d space or do we just keep it in the same position but angle it\'s direction 20 degrees vertically/horizontally?\r\n\r\nThanks for the episode. Much appreciated.','2021-08-09 18:55:29'),
|
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(3218,3395,'2021-08-09 16:37:46','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved this story','I always love hearing people\'s war stories from security. If you have more, please send them in.','2021-08-09 18:55:29'),
|
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(3219,3388,'2021-08-10 12:46:38','Bob','Clarification','In the interest of fairness and balance the rms-open-letter gained 3004 signatories and stopped accepting more after just Eight Days. The rms-support-letter has only garnered 6800 signatures while still accepting signatories over four and a half months later. You also forgot to mention the 61 organizations that are party to the rms-open-letter.','2021-08-10 21:56:34'),
|
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|
(3220,3388,'2021-08-11 00:03:50','dragestil','Re: Clarification','In the interest of fairness and balance the rms-support-letter started one day after rms-open-letter. On 2021-04-01 when rms-open-letter stopped accepting more signatures, rms-support-letter had 5051 signatures [1], compared to 3005 sigantures on rms-open-letter [2].\r\n\r\n[1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20210401173629/https://rms-support-letter.github.io/\r\n[2]: https://web.archive.org/web/20210401173734/https://rms-open-letter.github.io/','2022-02-14 13:25:16'),
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(3221,3400,'2021-08-12 00:41:35','bjb','Thanks','Thanks for your series on GIMP, I\'ve always found it hard to use and I think this is going to clear up some of my issues. In this episode - I\'m thankful to learn that layers have \"modes\", I didn\'t know that. I think that\'s my main problem with GIMP - it has functionality I don\'t know about, and sometimes I end up in these other modes and all the commands do unexpected-to-me things in those modes. So now I know to watch out for these layer modes. I\'ll have to try it out!','2021-08-12 21:50:02'),
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|
(3222,3400,'2021-08-12 22:20:53','Kevin O\'Brien','You are most welcome','I\'m glad you are finding this helpful. I can recall a time when I was totally confused about GIMP, and would look for some other program to use. Then I decided to dig in and figure it out, and now I wonder why more people don\'t use GIMP since it is so powerful. But like all powerful tools, it does take time to learn.','2021-08-13 22:08:22'),
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(3223,3399,'2021-08-14 20:55:05','Kevin O\'Brien','Another good show','As anyone who has listened to my shows knows I take licensing very seriously. My own view is that if your objective is to expand the free software ecosystem, use the GPL. If your objective is to promote proprietary software, use one of the unrestrictive licenses like MIT or BSD','2021-08-15 20:25:53'),
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|
(3224,3395,'2021-08-23 17:50:39','Beeza','Social Engineering Access','Hi Operat0r\r\n\r\nReally enjoyed this show. I was particularly interested in your references to gaining physical access to sites using social engineering. In England 40 years ago we used the term \"blagging\" and my late father was an expert at it. He was in the electrical engineering business and would almost routinely attend conferences and other events for which he had not paid the required fee. His secret was, as he put it, \"to look like you have every right to be there\", and if you can carry that off everything else drops into place.\r\n\r\nBear in mind that in those days tickets were paper rather than electronic, so a name \"missed\" from the official list could not be easily verified. Organisers would often apologise for their apparent shortcomings and make sure he got a good seat, freebies and even a free ticket for a forthcoming event.\r\n\r\nAn episode dedicated to this often overlooked and rare skill could be particularly popular - as long as listeners don\'t get too inspired and wind up behind bars!','2021-08-23 19:41:49'),
|
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|
(3225,3407,'2021-08-27 05:16:14','Some Guy On The Internet','Great Show.','Great show. I like humble bundle for my books because I can use them on any device. Freedom seems to be hard work these days; we have to invest time researching ever purchase because of greedy companies.','2021-08-27 19:10:02'),
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(3226,3410,'2021-08-27 17:30:43','Trey','Love this history','Thank you for sharing this info. It is so much fun learning the history and challenges we take for granted behind today\'s technology.\r\n\r\nIt reminds me of the PBS 3 part documentary \"Triumph of the Nerds\"\r\n\r\nKeep up the awesome work.\r\n\r\nTrey','2021-08-27 19:10:02'),
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|
(3227,3410,'2021-08-27 21:04:44','Kevin O\'Brien','You are most welcome','Ultimately klaatu is the person who got this going. This material was on my web site for over 20 years when he asked to use it for Opensource.com. That got me to ask Ken if he thought HPR would like it. But I guess it shows the value of having your own web sites and controlling your own content.','2021-08-27 21:55:02'),
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|
(3228,3410,'2021-08-27 21:56:50','Jan','Observations','Many thanks for this really informative show. :-)\r\n\r\nThe mp3 seems to bee some what broken.','2021-08-27 22:21:43'),
|
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|
(3229,3382,'2021-08-28 13:59:15','ShortFatBaldGuy','Appreciation for episode','Simple and elegant, use what you have! I always love listening to your episodes! I used stainless hose clamps on my 2005 Tacoma catalytic converter heat shield, as I was not so fortunate to have a bolted on one. So far they have lasted 5 years in case your lids meet an untimely demise.','2021-08-28 18:22:48'),
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|
(3230,3323,'2021-08-29 15:55:14','bjb','Interesting','This was super interesting. I have to admit I had one of Ken Fallon\'s thoughts (which he expressed in the community news covering April) - what happens if someone hosting a DNS server in the opennic group returns authoritative results for a name that ICANN should be responsible for - as an example, imagine someone else returns authoritative results for your bank\'s or doctor\'s URL.','2021-08-29 20:15:15'),
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(3231,3410,'2021-08-30 14:29:32','Kevin O\'Brien','Audio quality','I don\'t know what problem you found with the MP3 file, but it was not on the original. I upload a FLAC file to HPR, which is then converted into other formats for downloading. I subscribe to the OGG feed, and just listened to the show on that feed, and there was no problem. So either there was a glitch in the conversion to MP3, or you had some issue with the download.','2021-08-30 18:41:48'),
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(3232,3410,'2021-08-30 18:10:47','Ken Fallon','Can you define broken','Hi Jan,\r\n\r\nI checked all the files and I can\'t find anything odd.\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr3410/hpr3410.png\r\n\r\nCan you give me more information please.\r\n\r\nThanks\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:25:16'),
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|
(3233,3413,'2021-09-01 01:14:43','b-yeezi','New tool for my toolbox','Thank you, Dave, for this great show. I will be definitely using coproc in the near future.','2021-09-01 20:33:16'),
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(3234,3413,'2021-09-02 00:47:24','Trey','Excellent detail!','Thank you for the detailed explanations in this episode. I was completely unfamiliar with coproc before listening. Now I have something new to play with, and am learning something new.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to the next bash episode.','2021-09-02 18:15:04'),
|
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(3235,3413,'2021-09-02 11:51:13','Dave Morriss','Re: New tool for my toolbox','Thanks b-yeezi,\r\n\r\nGlad you enjoyed the show. I hope you find coproc a useful thing. An HPR show on your experiences would be very welcome I\'m sure!\r\n\r\nDave','2021-09-02 18:15:04'),
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(3236,3414,'2021-09-02 14:22:24','Trey','Controversial topic... Love it!','Hopefully this will spur some interesting discussions, and maybe further shows.\r\n\r\nThank you for sharing.','2021-09-02 18:15:05'),
|
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(3237,3413,'2021-09-02 20:07:03','Dave Morriss','Re: Excellent detail!','Thanks Trey,\r\n\r\nGlad you found the show useful. I sometimes wonder if I\'m overdoing the detail, but I enjoy getting into the intricacies of stuff and like to share what I find.\r\n\r\nI\'m planning Bash Tips episode 22 at the moment, so it should be out before too long.\r\n\r\nDave','2021-09-02 20:08:06'),
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(3238,3414,'2021-09-03 15:08:53','drad','Great Episode!','I appreciate this episode, regardless of your view critical thinking is key (for COVID and everything else in life). Great information that I hope will make people think and possibly do some research of their own.','2021-09-03 19:01:29'),
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(3239,3415,'2021-09-04 19:25:19','Willingness','Awesome','Dude, these stories are fantastic. Please keep them coming. While the average listener may not appreciate each and every aspect, along with the technical details, they read (listen) more like an adventure than a resume...','2021-09-04 19:28:56'),
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(3240,3416,'2021-09-07 00:57:13','Kevin O\'Brien','My former profession','You said something to the effect of me having a \"teacherly manner\", and that may be the result of my 20 years teaching at the university level. I loved the teaching part, but I hated the paperwork, and especially disliked to low pay. In the U.S. at least teaching is not valued at all, so I left academia to become an IT Project Manager, which is the main reason I can enjoy my retirement now.','2021-09-07 19:53:54'),
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|
(3241,3417,'2021-09-08 12:34:37','Michael','Why Ceph?','Hi, thanks for the interesting podcast. I actually thought of doing this as well. Can I ask why you picked CEPH instead of Gluster? I think Gluster has an ARM port (but I don\'t know if it works on Raspberry Pi).','2021-09-08 21:39:02'),
|
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(3242,3414,'2021-09-09 16:02:59','Barbara Ann Walko','hpr3414','Thank you for this beneficial information about COVID and the benefits of Vitamin D3','2021-09-09 20:06:37'),
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|
(3243,3414,'2021-09-09 17:50:18','Joel','Excellent analysis!','So much about this \'pandemic\' has been very questionable. The Scientific Method demands observations from various perspectives. That hasn\'t happened this time: anyone deviating from the politically-correct narrative was ignored, called names, or shouted down. Coercion, bribery and threats to get \'the jab\' are suspect. Where were directions on prevention and treatments? CoGo mentions Vitamin D. This parallels my findings on prevention; zinc also turns up in my research. Big pharma is making big dollars on this event. And as mentioned in this episode, an even more nefarious agenda may be happening than mere $ profit. I heard it said that America is suffering from a lack of conspiracy theories! This is because most of what was initially called conspiracy theory has mostly become truth recently! So yes: critical thinking and research are required in our unusual times. Thank you CoGo.','2021-09-09 20:06:37'),
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(3244,3420,'2021-09-12 06:17:43','mu.rupeshkumar@gmail,com','can\'t hear in Mobile','Cannot hear in Mobile\n','2021-09-12 12:44:37'),
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|
(3245,3420,'2021-09-13 10:17:58','Ken Fallon','Fixed','Thanks for the feedback. There were clicks in there that prevented the normalization from working.\r\n\r\nWe fixed it manually.','2021-09-13 20:06:00'),
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(3246,3421,'2021-09-13 16:34:20','Trey','Welcome & thanks for sharing!','Welcome and thank you for sharing. I remember building gates from transistors and then more complex logic circuits from only NAND gates. Those exercises help you to break complex problems down into more simple steps and are valuable in any technical career, especially information technology and security.\r\n\r\nI look forward to your future posts.','2021-09-13 20:06:00'),
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(3247,3423,'2021-09-15 21:23:22','Trey','Great work','Thank you for sharing episodes like these. Not only is the information you present valuable, but sharing your thought process helps provide context, as well as a launch point for others to build on.\r\n\r\nI encourage you to keep it up, and start using git to manage and share your code and comments. \r\n\r\nPS. I still dispise markdown. :)','2021-09-15 22:19:15'),
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(3248,3426,'2021-09-20 16:01:09','Trey','Thank you.','I have been considering learning some Rust, and this has given me the nudge needed to give it a try. \r\n\r\nLooking forward to \"Hello World\" episode.','2021-09-20 18:42:34'),
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(3249,3426,'2021-09-20 19:38:44','Hipstre','Rust 101, Episode 0','Great to hear you talk about languages the way that you do. You give a lot of context without a lot of lingo. Looking forward to the next episode. \r\n\r\nLisp: Everything is a list.\r\nUnix: Everything is a file.\r\nRuby: Everything is an object.\r\nHaskell: Everything is a function.\r\nRust: EVERYTHING IS AN ERROR!','2021-09-20 20:23:24'),
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(3250,3297,'2021-09-21 16:32:18','Ken Fallon','+1','Used this today','2021-09-21 18:27:34'),
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(3251,3427,'2021-09-22 21:36:30','jrullo','Vim lover','This looks pretty great. I just installed ranger and love it already. Thanks for calling attention to ranger, etc. I\'m still digging in, but so far so awesome!','2021-09-22 21:41:13'),
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(3252,3429,'2021-09-23 00:36:16','Clinton Roy','Just the usual complaint','Martin\'s volume is again/still way too low. It\'s a PITA to change the volume when speakers change.','2021-09-23 20:29:50'),
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(3253,3430,'2021-09-24 11:34:10','Trey','Trip down memory lane...','Thank you, Ahuka. This brought back memories of working with PCs back in the \'80s. Fun times.\r\n\r\nKeep up the awesome episodes.','2021-09-24 19:45:57'),
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(3254,3430,'2021-09-24 20:44:26','Kevin O\'Brien','You are most welcome','I\'m glad you enjoyed it. It takes me back too. There are more to come.','2021-09-24 20:46:12'),
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(3255,3431,'2021-09-27 12:15:59','Operat0r','Kids these days!','Wow... I didn\'t think people like you really existed! Mad props ! Me 4 days ago would have asked you about playing music though a SSH tunnel? but I just switched to PlexAmp for music because my wife uses Subsonic too. I think Subsonic is dying...Another thing is I really enjoy the highlighting in my windows MobaXterm terminal. I have tried a few times to get my entire terminal setup with syntax highlighting and keyword stuff like Moba does but its app specific ... so for example in Vi I can have nice colors then I leave the terminal and I get B/W .. What I want is everything everywhere highlighted like :\r\n\r\n\r\n* warning messages,error,not,info,complete,OK, IP address,commandline switches ( example ) https://mobaxterm.mobatek.net/img/moba/features/feature-syntax-highlighting.png\r\n* syntax highlighting (without having to name it .bash or .sh ) so for example if I cat out a binary file and it has random scripting or programing in it .. maybe it (detects) python and highlights that …\r\n\r\nAnyway great stuff keep fighting the good fight!','2021-09-27 19:46:17'),
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(3256,3446,'2021-09-27 13:49:47','operat0r','Example script','I updated the script to work with \'most\' wonky file names:\r\n\r\nhttps://github.com/freeload101/SCRIPTS/blob/master/Bash/Stream_to_Text_with_Keywords.sh','2021-09-27 19:46:17'),
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(3257,3431,'2021-09-28 15:53:48','b-yeezi','+1 for cnus','Thank you for this great show. I also use CMUS, as it\'s the only program that doesn\'t choke on my extremely large music library that I have on an NFS mount. I will be trying out most, and I encourage you to try out ranger!','2021-09-28 20:33:15'),
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(3258,3431,'2021-09-29 16:50:49','sesamemucho','The text','Thanks for the show! At one point I used emacs on the console because I didn\'t have enough RAM to run X windows and a compiler at the same time.\r\n\r\nNever sat down and got the Linux console to use a good font - these days I run the i3 window manager, so I get a lot of terminal windows, and graphics apps as needed.\r\n\r\nIf you\'re looking for an improved sort of ncurses, you could look into the Textual framework.\r\n\r\nFigured there would be more comments here about \'6\'!','2021-09-29 20:24:03'),
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(3259,3431,'2021-09-29 20:50:34','Dave Morriss','Very enjoyable','Hi,\r\n\r\nLoved the show. I started on mainframes in the 1970\'s where all there was was a teletype or physical terminal. I use X-Windows now, but spend the majority of my time in terminal emulators.\r\n\r\nHaving spent today in the Linux console on my Debian Testing system debugging a problem caused by the last update, I\'m appreciating being back in KDE. The problem was due to multiple incompatible versions of the NVIDIA \"legacy\" driver lurking in the system it turned out. I wouldn\'t want to stay in the console though, even with tmux.\r\n\r\nLike you I\'m a fan of ncurses, and have written a few simple things in my time.\r\n\r\nI\'m a Vim user and am contemplating moving to Neovim. I\'ve written a few basic extensions in Vimscript but like the look of Neovim\'s Lua interface.\r\n\r\nFinally, you had me going for a moment, calling \'vi\' \'six\' :-) Having been an ed and ex user in the past on various Unix flavours, I remembered that \'vi\' was the abbreviated \'visual\' command that gave you the screen mode from ex.\r\n\r\nDave\r\n','2021-09-29 13:53:40'),
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(3260,3377,'2021-09-30 17:02:55','FSA','Sound Quality Trolling?','l\'m not a sound quality snob, and I\'m happy to listen to shows recorded with *unintentionally* not great audio as long as the subject matter is interesting to me. But I think it\'s another matter to intentionally create bad sound quality. Was it a joke? Just trying to make a point? Or just straight up trolling (which is what I suspect based on some of the other passing comments)? Whatever the answer, chalk up one more comment / vote against the idea of intentionally creating a bad experience for your listeners','2021-10-02 07:56:07'),
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(3261,3434,'2021-10-01 05:02:24','b-yeezi','What an amazing show','I was truly impressed with this show. This could have been 2 or 3 shows. I appreciate the hard work you put into the show notes. I will be using them someday soon.\r\n\r\nOne note to other listeners - although you can install kubernetes on a Raspberry Pi 3, it\'s super slow, so I wouldn\'t recommend it.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work!','2021-10-02 07:56:07'),
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(3262,3434,'2021-10-01 17:48:20','Mike Ray','Great show','Great show Klaatu.\r\n\r\nFast delivery, accurate, concise, clear, uncluttered, few verbal ticks.\r\n\r\nVery few people can deliver a show as fast as I can think.\r\n\r\nOne of about half a dozen hosts that have me reaching for the play button instead of the delete button','2021-10-02 07:56:07'),
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(3263,3433,'2021-10-02 05:08:36','Ben','Yikes!','Moves to legalize pedophilia in europe? Where did you hear that from, breitbart? I live here, I should have heard about something like that, but so far everything goes in the opposite direction, towards more child protection, and there\'re even some discussions about raising the age of consent (it\'s been forteen since the concept existed, which was way before even you were arround).\r\n\r\nAs for cigarettes and beer on airplanes: your freedom stops where my rights begin, and I feel I do have the right not to be covered in drug gunk and beer (carbonated drink don\'t work to well in low cabin pressure)','2021-10-02 19:55:09'),
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(3264,3433,'2021-10-03 10:24:32','archer72','Good call, Ken','That was a good call, putting a disclaimer on this episode. There was about 1 minute in that were facts about RMS, then devolved. This was one in which I could not finish, as I am a parent like a lot of us in our little \'hacker space\'. I find the subject of pedophilia disgusting and to most, I would imagine, no appropriate here.','2021-10-03 19:27:55'),
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(3265,3426,'2021-10-04 20:56:17','Honkeymagoo','another fun way to learn rust','Another fun way to learn rust\r\nhttps://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/rust-by-example/','2021-10-04 21:51:47'),
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(3266,3433,'2021-10-04 23:41:08','Zen_floater2','Reply to Ben','France legalized Pedophillia : see article. France becomes latest EU nation to legalize Pedophilia \r\n\r\nhttps://thetruthrevolution.net/france-passes-pedophile-friendly-law-saying-children-can-consent-to-sex-with-adults/\r\n\r\nFrance follows a similar move in Germany to legalize Pedophillia - Age of consent to be 15 years of age.','2021-10-05 16:33:44'),
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(3267,3433,'2021-10-04 23:45:51','Zen_floater2','Reply to archer72','I made the title of the show \"A Squirrels thoughts about RMS\" and the subject line reads \"RMS and the subject of freedom\" specifically because I wanted to cover RMS\'s free speech rights being rejected by a commuinity. And wanted to talk about that \'community\'s\' actions in causing damage to Richard Mathew Stallmans person. \r\nThe show, should you have listened to it all the way, was not about Pedophilia explicitly but rather about the violation of RMS\'s rights as a person under the law.','2021-10-05 16:33:44'),
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(3268,3433,'2021-10-05 16:30:10','Ken Fallon','Disapointed with this show','I added that warning following a complaint from a listener. Our guidelines are \"If you feel that your show will be considered inoffensive in every region of the world then you can signal that when you upload the show.\" This was not done in this case.\r\n\r\nHaving now listened to the show myself, I want everyone to know that I personally do not in any way endorse or support the opinions in this show. \r\n\r\nI am very disappointed with this show. I am sure that HPR would appreciate shows that covered these contentious topics - provided they were handled with care, compassion and without insulting anyone.','2021-10-05 16:33:44'),
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(3269,3433,'2021-10-05 16:57:25','Bob','Deliberately misleading ?','I thought HPR was \"dedicated to sharing knowledge\", so why is this host distorting the truth ? \r\n\r\nhttps://www.factcheck.org/2018/08/putting-frances-consent-issue-into-context/\r\n\r\nQ: Did France pass \"a law saying having sex with a child is okay\"?\r\n\r\nA: No. The country already didn’t have a legal consent age. The new law makes it easier to file rape charges against adults who have sex with those 15 or younger.','2021-10-06 22:12:58'),
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(3270,3433,'2021-10-05 18:36:52','Zen_floater2','Reply to Ken Fallon','Ken, I flagged the show using the supplied, \r\nis flagged as Explicit \" switch which is provided on the website. It seems I don\'t understand the difference in what your requesting and this switch for Explicit content. Offense is in the eye\'s of the beholder. Frankly, anyone can be \'offended\' by anything Ken. The term offended is highly subjective and easily pulled. \r\nIf you feel this show is too much of a burden for you then by all means, delete the show. If however you want to keep the show to use as an example to others, then keep the show. Either way, I promise you that \"I WILL NOT BE OFFENDED\", not offended in any way. It\'s just a show Ken... :}','2021-10-06 22:12:58'),
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(3271,3431,'2021-10-06 16:36:48','Gumnos','Using \"c\" to pause in cmus','The controls in cmus are laid out like a traditional VCR/tape-player from left-to-right in the bottom corner of a traditional QWERTY keyboard:\r\n\r\nz=prev ⏮️ \r\nx=play ▶️ \r\nc=pause ⏯️ \r\nv=stop ⏹️ \r\nb=next ⏭️ \r\n\r\nI can\'t say it helps me remember *much*, but at least that\'s the reasoning behind the non-mnemonic keys.','2021-10-06 22:12:59'),
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(3272,3439,'2021-10-07 13:37:10','ClaudioM','Best of BSD!','Great episode, gents! That was an awesome interview and I could have listened for even longer if you did go the full 3 hours, LOL. Definitely better guests for interview than I\'d ever be. ;-)','2021-10-07 20:25:28'),
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(3273,3438,'2021-10-07 13:42:20','ClaudioM','Mojeek','Great episode. Nice to hear a few of the ones I\'ve used and known about mentioned as well as some others I\'ve not known about. One that wasn\'t mentioned that I recently came to discover is called Mojeek. More information about Mojeek below.\r\n\r\nMojeek: https://www.mojeek.com/\r\n\r\nWikipedia entry on Mojeek: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojeek\r\n\r\nSDF, the well-known public access UNIX system since 1987, has its own Whoogle instance: https://whoogle.sdf.org/','2021-10-07 20:25:28'),
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(3274,3337,'2021-10-07 21:20:49','Windigo','Amazing','Through various hardware and software calamities, my podcasts have been out-of-reach for more than six months. Just recently, I\'ve been able to remedy it, and this was the first HPR episode in my queue that I was able to listen to.\r\n\r\nOh, how I\'ve missed HPR. Thank you for the thoroughly enjoyable episode!','2021-10-08 18:03:18'),
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(3275,2793,'2021-10-08 10:58:59','clacke','Real world use, thanks Dave!','\"Now go out and play with this and come back with an example on how this is actually useful in the real world, and submit a show!\"\r\n\r\nDave Morriss did so in HPR3413:\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=3413\r\n\r\nEven though he concludes that this feature is awkward compared to the alternatives, it\'s great to have a less contrived example!','2022-02-14 13:25:17'),
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(3276,3439,'2021-10-09 15:57:10','Zen_floater2','This show put me up a tree','I had to play this show about 3 times to get all the content out of it. Installing and running Gnome 3 on OpenBSD is extremely easy as GDM does all the work for you. Setting up Pulse Audio is probably the hardest part most newbies have difficulty with. But you know, this Squirrel is sick and tired of heavy desktops. I\'m also getting sick and tired of Intel/AMD64 platforms - the plastic CPU\'s from hell. And I long for the mainframe days where we just used a dumb terminal - I was happy then. I have a few OpenBSD servers to use via SSH which satisfy this urge but, I need to by some dumb terminals and put OpenBSD on my Rasberry PI 400 thingie and take my 2 chromebooks and just drown them both in a deep bathtub somewhere. There is no such thing as a perfect desktop, I hate them all. Those desktops always leave you feeling unsatisfied with life. Why do we even put up with desktops and what drives Fedora to continue on with Gnome? What are they going to get out of it? What will IBM get out of it? Everyone should run OpenBSD or NetBSD or Fuguita or how about GUIX with the HURD instead of all this linux stuff. We want something different on the computer table. Really, Gnome and SystemD is like a slow creeping cancer. \r\nAnd a boring cancer too where your limbs fall off one at a time every 3-4 years.','2021-10-10 18:29:05'),
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(3277,3442,'2021-10-13 13:41:32','Brian-in-ohio','science','Look at those show notes!\r\n I wish science was as pure as you say it is but were money is concerned, and you can\'t deny people have gotten wealthy because of covid-19, the science gets tainted. Richard Feynman would often point out how difficult science experiments are to do, especially in biological science, were control of variables is almost impossible. Proof that the science around covid is as muddled as any science, can be seen when the scientists decided to vaccinate the placebo group in the study, \r\nhttps://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/02/19/969143015/long-term-studies-of-covid-19-vaccines-hurt-by-placebo-recipients-getting-immuni \r\n(yes that is the whole url). That decision was driven by opinion, not facts. Science is hard and flawed. \r\n\r\nTrusting the experts can lead to things like systemd and them saying \'just trust us it works\'.\r\n\r\nAlso, much of what we call science is actually engineering, developement of RISC architecture is probaby done by engineers, whose goals are different than scientists.\r\n\r\nlastly a famous scientist said \r\n\r\n\'If you can\'t explain it simply, you don\'t understand it well enough.\'\r\n\r\nAlbert Einstein','2021-10-14 13:16:04'),
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(3278,3442,'2021-10-13 14:05:32','e8hffff','Re:[HPR3442] Klaatu, CoVID, and Science','Klaatu, A science endeavour starts with a hypothesis that is later given weight via scrutiny from ALL KNOWN effecting factors. Your claim that CoVID19 dangers and affects are known and an accepted condition by Medicos, is false as that stance presumes ethics and truths were a part of employment and statistics gathered during the so called CoVID19 pandemic. It also presumes all Medicos are on-board CoVID19 Agenda, which is totally incorrect.\r\n\r\nIf you didn\'t shelter your mind or you only exposed yourself to filtered social media, btw not being offensive, you would know that it\'s common place for hospitals to place anyone with symptoms of CoVID19 (that includes influenza) into an induced-comma and then intubation/ventilators. This makes attending a hospital in this era with any cold or flu, dangerous, as ventilators are known to damage the lungs and should only be used in extreme situations where no other option is available. It\'s also common knowledge that hospitals around the world are refusing to use anti-viral medications, as it\'s not a part of the CoVID19 Agenda to use them, with early political demonisation. Hospitals are also sponsored for deaths and treatment of CovID19 with money lump sums. Therefore the deaths and surviving patients reflect the malpractice, resulting in bad statistics used in your SCIENCE assumption.\r\n\r\nThe CoVID19 vaccines another field of corruption and dangers.\r\n\r\n https://duckduckgo.com/?q=damaging+incubation+ventilators&t=ffab&ia=web','2021-10-14 13:16:05'),
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(3279,3436,'2021-10-13 15:36:12','Ken Fallon','Clarification','In the last community news I said that he checked a show and found that it was \'of interest to hackers\'. I should have said he checked it and \"it was not spam\".\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php\r\n\r\n\r\n*The audio of your show will not be moderated.*\r\n\r\nWe do not vet, edit, moderate or in any way censor any of the audio you submit, we trust you to do that. Aside from checking snippets for audio quality/spam checking, we have a policy that we don\'t listen to the shows before they are aired.','2021-10-14 13:16:05'),
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(3280,3444,'2021-10-14 14:13:27','Brian-in-ohio','compliment','I loved this show! Nice to hear about older hardware being used.','2021-10-14 20:47:04'),
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(3281,3442,'2021-10-14 17:53:40','kingbeowulf','scientific method selectively apply based on \"feelings\"?','Klaatu, your counterpoint is spot on and well said. The analogy to CPU design and construction is well done. There is a lot of chemistry and physics involved that even I have a hard time following.\r\n\r\nAs a chemist, I am befuddled by some of my colleagues forgetting the scientific method and singling COVID-19 vaccination as either unimportant or a \"conspiracy\", as compared to the dozens of other vaccines we all have taken. I sure a heck do not what to return to the \"good old days\" of polio, smallpox, diphtheria, measles, tetanus, hepatitis A/B, flu/HIB, pertussis, mumps...and don\'t even get me started on chicken pox...','2021-10-14 20:47:04'),
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(3282,3444,'2021-10-14 18:07:17','Gumnos','Looking forward to this one!','I\'ve long desired to own a 5mx (possibly running either Linux or NetBSD) but have never been able to justify the cost outlay to myself. Looking forward to hearing about your adventures with it!','2021-10-14 20:47:04'),
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(3283,3445,'2021-10-13 17:47:41','ironhelixx','This is the way to handle misinformation','I applaud you both for addressing this with facts and patience, and without dipping into any personal attacks - well done, and an enjoyable listen - thank you both for challenging the other episode logically, and for bringing some sanity to the conversation - best wishes to you both','2021-10-15 18:18:37'),
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(3284,3442,'2021-10-14 23:32:00','Mad Sweeney','Hats Off to You','Klaatu, a very elegant rebuttal.\r\nHats off to you for your measured and thoughtful response and coolness\r\nin the face of such astonishing ignorance.','2021-10-15 18:18:37'),
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(3285,3445,'2021-10-15 12:45:38','Aaronb','Reasoning','This is not a criticism for this podcast. But just something I come across once in a while.\r\n\r\nI will here people say \"I believe in this or don\'t believe that because I reason.\"\r\n\r\nIt\'s nice when people can declare themselves a reasonable person. It\'s different if others else views them that ways.','2021-10-15 18:18:38'),
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(3286,3444,'2021-10-15 19:53:49','Cometcycle','Trip down memory lane','Great to hear a show about a Psion PDA. I still have a Revo somewhere in need of repair. Never got round to getting it working directly with Linux but used under a VM with Windows XP and Lotus Smartsuite.','2021-10-17 19:03:44'),
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(3287,3414,'2021-10-16 06:10:59','e8hffff','Common Sense','This is a perfect example of common-sense thrown out the window. A bane of the world today. You should never dispose of common-sense and replace it with mathematics. Mathematics, and when used is statistical pursuit, can only attempt to simulate scenarios from data supplied, or framed pictures of their very construction. Common sense is science, that of observed commonalities and events, even if labelled as anecdotal(said in conversation, wives tales, etc).\r\n\r\nMasks are not advantageous as you are complicating a situation of natural body design, that of expelling toxins through the nose and hoping to breath in cleaner air. Masks unquestionably increase viral/bacterial load. Therefore creating spreaders. With the higher loads, comes elevate deaths and ailments, creating erroneous lethargy statistics for any said virus. That can result in political overreach/oversight as seen in CoVID19. The benefit of reducing virus particles with a mask is outweighed by the damages they cause. Common sense. No you don\'t need a PubMed article to comprehend that. Also consider some people correctly breath though their filtering nose, and other incorrectly through their mouth. Masks complicate breathing for those properly using nose, and espouse mouth use.\r\n\r\nOn weather seasons having an effect on viruses and contagion. You don\'t need to search for lab papers on cold weather and viruses susceptibility to disprove summer protections. Common sense should tell you that viruses are naturally burnt out of the body via a \"temperature\". Therefore Summer can only assist in raising the body\'s heat when infected, causing fast mitigation. This includes hot baths. You would also easily say moisture assists in virus survivable in the environment, making cold moist weather a disadvantage health.\r\n\r\nAlso consider your stance is based on trust of politician and science workers and industry. That is unquestionably a flawed stance.','2021-10-17 19:03:44'),
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(3288,3442,'2021-10-16 06:23:21','e8hffff','The Pharmacist','Kingbeowulf. Polio was already being eradicated via hygiene measures. Also Polio disabilities are also the symptoms of other affects, like radiation damage, which was a new technology of the era and people got exposed to high levels. The Polio epidemic was caused by many factors. The Polio vaccine is definitely not the cause out of that disease. The modern spread of Polio has been via Polio vaccines. Do the research.\r\n\r\nMeasles was never consider dangerous during it being common, with people getting natural immunity and creating a better scenario than current. You\'ve probably heard of the Brady Bunch episode of having a measles party. Well that was the go in that period. People got it and got over it. Near to zero issues and resulted in better outcomes of being naturally immune.\r\n\r\nVaccines are in themselves a danger and have caused many new conditions like Autism and SIDS, never experienced by most before 80\'s, before the vaccine regime. 1/54 births are now Autistic. Autism in communities that don\'t vaccinate are near to zero.','2021-10-17 19:03:44'),
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(3289,3445,'2021-10-16 06:33:22','e8hffff','Common Sense','Consider that CoVID19 dangers are the Spike Protein, yet the CoVID19 vaccines create Spike Protein. Therefore it\'s a question of scale of damage. CovID19 vaccines/injections are inherently damaging. Some getting anaphylaxic shock and death from the injections.','2021-10-17 19:03:44'),
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(3290,3444,'2021-10-16 12:05:46','Dave Morriss','Great show!','Hi Nihilazo,\r\n\r\nThanks so much for doing the show, it was excellent.\r\n\r\nIt brought a tear to my eye to hear the story of my old Psion being so well appreciated and cared for!\r\n\r\nI worked for university IT department here in Edinburgh, and my boss bought these devices for all of the managers in the department. I used mine a lot over the years. Occasionally I\'d record audio on it, but more often I\'d write notes in meetings or use its calendar and contact application.\r\n\r\nI\'m pretty certain it can output documents to a printer using a built-in IR device. I had an monochrome HP LaserJet in my office which would accept documents over IR. It was really useful in this regard. No idea how you\'d do that these days - an IR device on a Raspberry Pi? Hmm...\r\n\r\nHope to hear more about your adventures with the Psion - and anything else \"of interest to hackers\" - in the future :-)\r\n\r\nDave','2021-10-17 19:03:45'),
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(3291,3445,'2021-10-19 13:41:45','Kevin O\'Brien','Bravo!','As very good analysis that uses genuine critical thinking. One thing that I haven\'t seen anyone point out yet is that in the original show much is made of the idea that masks are not air-tight. Of course they aren\'t! If they were, people wearing them would die! I have worked in several hospitals in my career, and masks do a decent (not perfect) job of what they are intended to do. If I were being prepared for surgery and my surgeon said he would not wear a mask \"Because I don\'t believe in them,\" I would most certainly stop everything and get a better surgeon.','2021-10-19 20:02:03'),
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(3292,3438,'2021-10-19 20:42:18','Linux4security','browser','Fulguris is a good one','2021-10-20 19:50:15'),
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(3293,3445,'2021-10-20 12:58:11','Brian-in-ohio','risk','Good show. \r\nOne exception i\'ll take is that ALL Americans turn to Anthony Faucci for our information, is just not true, the man is flawed and so is his wife. \r\nThe only thing lacking in both podcasts is a discussion of risk analysis. ALL people have different levels of risk they are willing to take. Politicians and policy makers creating one size fits all solutions, like arbitrary social distancing dimensions, leads many people to become suspicious and consider riskier behaviour. \r\nI do agree with the earlier comment about using I feel or I believe language. That tends to be opinion.','2021-10-21 23:06:18'),
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(3294,3433,'2021-10-22 12:13:29','Ben','Reply to #4','Better late than never, I guess.\r\nThe source you give is questionable at best. As Bob pointed out, France doesn\'t have a age of consent, so the law actually added one, even thou it is defined weaker than in the US.\r\nAs for Germany: as I said, it already IS 14. And it won\'t change, because 14 is also the start of (limited) legal liability, and germans generally don\'t consider the idea of \"no sex until marriage\", and teenagers shouldn\'t have to go to jail for trying themselves out (Rape is a different story, because the lack of CONSENT).\r\nThere is no recent move, and no movement, and the cited attorney doesn\'t even exist, which should be a red flag, no matter the stories content!','2021-10-22 19:58:26'),
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(3295,3445,'2021-10-30 10:44:21','Dave Morriss','Response to e8hffff, comment #3','In general viruses \"break in\" to cells in order to use their replication machinery to\r\nmake more viruses. In the case of SARS-CoV-2 the spike protein is the part of\r\nthe virus that is used to \"break in\". It\'s not dangerous in itself, it\'s part\r\nof the toolkit this virus uses to gain control of cells and make more viruses.\r\n\r\nIn order for the human immune system to fight against a foreign chemical or\r\n\"antigen\" (usually a protein of some kind since living things use proteins as\r\nbuilding blocks) it needs to be exposed to the antigen and build antibodies\r\n(and other immune responses). Many of the vaccines use methods of delivering\r\nor generating the spike protein in order to \"teach\" the immune system what to\r\nbe alert to. Some use \"killed\" viruses instead, but none of these are in use\r\nin the USA and Europe to my knowledge.\r\n\r\nSo, vaccines are not inherently damaging, as you state. They cause your \r\nimmune system to react, which is the point, and this can result in soreness\r\nat the injection site, fevers, aches, and similar symptoms. Yes, anaphylactic\r\nshock can result from an allergic reaction to the vaccine itself - as it can\r\nfrom peanuts, eggs, insect bites or seafood for example. In the UK, as I said in the show, we\r\nare asked to wait for 15 minutes after our vaccination in case such an\r\nallergic reaction is triggered, and there are medics nearby to deal with any\r\nsuch emergencies.','2021-10-30 13:51:41'),
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(3296,3414,'2021-10-30 12:10:14','Dave Morriss','Response to e8hffff, comment #5','I assume you\'re commenting on show 3445, which is a response to this show 3414.\r\n\r\nYou are of the opinion that common sense outweighs the knowledge achieved through the scientific method. History seems to disagree. The \"common sense\" prior to the discovery of \"germs\" resulted in the death of many who would have survived if hand-washing had been more common, for example. There are huge numbers of similar examples.\r\n\r\nYou make an assertion about masks, which I disagree with. You assert that your view outweighs the research we cited in show 3445 yet your only support for this is that you state it. This seems typical of the current trend to put forward opinion as superior to fact.\r\n\r\nYou mistake trust in the scientific method and the results that this method produces, in comparison to those who misrepresent this method and these results for their own agendas and profits. Agreed that many politicians, industrialists and even some dishonest scientists are known to do this. However, where human beings may sometimes be unreliable the properly conducted and peer reviewed scientific method is not.','2021-10-30 13:51:41'),
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(3297,3445,'2021-10-30 13:01:59','Dave Morriss','Response to Brian-in-ohio, comment #5','From my point of view Dr Fauci is a skilled virologist and immunologist. I had heard him on virology podcasts long before COVID-19 and found him very impressive as a scientist and as a human being.\r\n\r\nYou refer to risk analysis, and you are right, we didn\'t deal much with this subject in our show. You write of the risk individuals are willing to take, and I often see this point being made. The point made less often is the risk each person poses to others. Unwillingness to avoid crowds, to consider physical distancing or contesting the need for a mask are stances taken in relation to the objector\'s risk. The risk to others seems to be disregarded or given very low priority.','2021-10-30 13:51:41'),
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(3298,3414,'2021-10-30 13:17:33','bob','Arguments','Both e8hffff and CoGo are arguing like lads in a pub. Sure their arguments makes some sort of sense when you\'ve had a few pints. In the cold light of day you find yourself wondering just how drunk you were.\r\n\r\nOn those occasions I vowed - \"Never again\". Great advice to both.','2021-10-31 19:06:55'),
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(3299,3454,'2021-10-31 11:04:54','Kevin O\'Brien','Odd word use','Do they really call exponents \"suffixes\" where you\'re from? I\'ve never heard that usage before.','2021-10-31 19:06:56'),
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(3300,3454,'2021-11-02 09:08:04','Ken Fallon','suffixes','They probably don\'t but I did. The goal of this series is to communicate via audio the location of the symbol.\r\n\r\nAlthough looking at the definition it\'s not a bad word to use.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.thefreedictionary.com/Suffixes.htm\r\n\r\nSuffixes are morphemes (specific groups of letters with particular semantic meaning) that are added onto the end of root words to change their meaning. Suffixes are one of the two predominant kinds of affixes—the other kind is prefixes, which come at the beginning of a root word.','2021-11-02 23:03:15'),
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(3301,2672,'2021-11-02 09:59:28','hhskladby','Porteus Modularity','Nice exposition, some things would need further / correct explanation also to klaatu (!), blame it on Porteus\' not-so-well own documentation, now and here only this what is VERY important (though not Porteus specific): Porteus\' XZM modules (as they are aufs / squashfs as in eg. Slax) do not \"overwrite\" anything on your machine, they interrupt your file system calls and make them believe that there are things that are not really there, so deactivating a module or restarting gives you an unchanged file system again, and if two programs conflict in shared resource file versions, you need not uninstall something, you just activate / deactivate modules - those modules may just be different versions of one library file, i.e. you can make a single file or a directory a module, and always your \"initial\" will not be corrupted by workarounds','2021-11-02 23:03:15'),
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(3302,3454,'2021-11-04 01:25:38','Trey','Great reminder','Thanks, Ken.\r\n\r\nI have been using these prefixes for decades, and take them for granted. Thanks for the reminder that this is not common knowledge.\r\n\r\nIt also reminds me of a question for which I have never found a good answer. In North America, capacitance, is expressed in uF (micro Farads) or pF (pico Farads). But nF (nano Farads) is not used. Instead you will see values like 10,000 pF or 0.01 uF.\r\n\r\nGo figure.','2021-11-04 21:10:55'),
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(3303,2169,'2021-11-06 03:15:40','clacke','NickServ authentication','Things have happened with IRC since 2016. In 2020 Thaj Sara recorded HPR 3034 https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=3034 as an update to this show, explaining how you can make Matrix authenticate your nick when it connects to IRC.','2022-02-14 13:25:17'),
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(3304,3034,'2021-11-06 03:21:52','clacke','libera.chat','Most Freenode channels have since moved to libera.\r\n\r\nI\'ll make a show about why and a show about how to connect to libera, but here\'s the spoiler:\r\n\r\nhttps://kparal.wordpress.com/2021/06/01/connecting-to-libera-chat-through-matrix/\r\n\r\n - Instead of #freenode_#oggcastplanet:matrix.org use #oggcastplanet:libera.chat (yes, they have their own gateway!)\r\n - Instead of chatting with @appservice-irc:matrix.org to store your login and password, chat with @appservice:libera.chat','2021-11-06 19:25:09'),
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(3305,3457,'2021-11-07 11:41:02','Jon Kulp','Tables and font sizes','I loved this episode, Klaatu. Somehow I find it really entertaining to hear all about the benefits and difficulties of tables and it\'s something I\'ve dealt with a good bit myself, but mostly in the context of eBook editing. In addition to the problems you mention, another one I find vexing is the impact of font sizes on tables. One of the best accessibility features of ebook formats and ebook readers is the user\'s option to change font size. When you\'re getting older like me and you typically increase the font sizes, you find that tables rarely survive the change unless you\'re on a big screen like a tablet. I will try almost any option to avoid making a table in one of my own ebook edits because it\'s too hard to predict screen size and font preferences. Lists will usually do the trick, just as you proposed in your episode. Now I wanna go take a look at your ebook...','2021-11-07 19:00:51'),
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(3306,3461,'2021-11-08 01:54:16','Mike eSpeak Ray','TTS','I made a small error in my comment to the subject about branding. I said the bit between TTS and raucaus music was an advert for AHH, but of course it is for archive.org.\r\n\r\nNow, I like the TTS. It gives me the chance to decide early whether to carry on listening, or press delete and go to sleep.\r\n\r\nBut the current TTS engine/settings used are boring. She sounds like a woman who has been awake for a week continuously. No prosody, no intonation. eSpeak is much better IMHO.\r\n\r\nIt could also speak faster for me personally, a lot faster.\r\n\r\nBut I know all you photon-dependent types won\'t agree ;-)','2021-11-08 21:12:39'),
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(3307,3464,'2021-11-11 21:57:47','brian-in-ohio','a serendipitous quote','As i was enjoying the show i logged into my new (to me) arm based running laptop (show coming) running slackware and my fortune said \"I have hardly known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning\" Plato.','2021-11-11 23:25:50'),
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(3308,3465,'2021-11-12 22:15:13','PipeManMusic','Real numbers to an off hand comment.','I\'m always of two minds on low cost tech when I see it, it\'s can be a burden on one side of the economic ladder and a boon for another. I usually fall on the side of access to technology can provide a net good. I do however feel compelled to point out Mississippi has the highest deaths per 1 million people in the United States.','2021-11-12 22:45:23'),
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(3309,3466,'2021-11-15 16:49:20','Ken Fallon','On the rise again','Just checked the last quarter and there has been a recovery of subscribers up 11,000 to prelockdown levels. This I suspect was triggered by the return to work and loosing of restrictions.\r\n\r\nAs winter hits the Northern Hemisphere and another wave approaches, I predict a falling of numbers again.','2021-11-16 19:28:50'),
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(3310,3457,'2021-11-17 15:24:29','Gumnos','Storing data in recsel format?','I\'m not sure if you\'ve encountered GNU recutils before\r\n\r\nhttps://www.gnu.org/software/recutils/\r\n\r\nbut it\'s a nice flat-file way of storing & querying data in a format similar to what you described. It\'s fairly easy to convert to CSV or other tabular format. It plays nicely with version-control, making it easier to tell when a \"column\" (really a row in a group) has been edited because the diff just shows that one \"cell\" rather than a whole CSV line being modified.\r\n\r\nIt\'s also pretty flexible when it comes to omitted or duplicate fields. I\'ve taken to storing our household address book in this format and then transforming it into other formats as needed.','2021-11-17 21:38:02'),
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(3311,3470,'2021-11-19 16:50:45','Trey','Oh what happy memories','Thank you for bringing back memories from early in my computer career. I still have a MSDOS 3.31 Emergency boot disk (Because it was the first to support hard drive partitions above 33MB). For the longest time, I kept it in the very front of my floppy disk case. But when I finally tossed all the old PC floppies, I relocated it to the esteemed location of stuck to the refrigerator door with a magnet.\r\n\r\nLikely won\'t boot anymore, but still brings back memories.\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work!','2021-11-19 19:08:48'),
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(3312,3470,'2021-11-19 22:12:52','Kevin O\'Brien','You are most welcome','I\'m glad you enjoyed it. There are more in the pipeline, but once they are done there won\'t be any more in this series. I wrote these 20-something years ago, and I still get happy users who find them on my Web site.','2021-11-20 19:26:21'),
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(3313,3471,'2021-11-22 14:32:18','Trey','Capacitors','Thank you for sharing. Tinkering with vintage electronics (Wait! Referring to the Walkman as \"vintage\" makes me feel really old.) is loads of fun. Do you find the need to replace capacitors in equipment of this era? I have noticed with various radio gear of similar age the capacitors have drifted far from spec.\r\n\r\nKeep up the awesome podcasts!','2021-11-22 22:35:52'),
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(3314,3471,'2021-11-23 13:05:23','Keith','They really are great devices','Thanks for making this, I do remember getting one back in the early 80\'s, however that is no longer around, shame I threw it out many years ago now.\r\n\r\nI\'m going to get out my Dad\'s Walkman on the weekend though and see if it still runs. I kept his Walkman WM-F2015 https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/sony_walkman_fmam_stereo_cassette_player_wm_f2015.html as I knew it was special hopefully it still runs, if not I will fix it!','2021-11-24 07:28:26'),
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(3315,3471,'2021-11-23 19:49:25','Jon Kulp','Recapping','Thanks for the comment, Trey. Yes, the Walkman is vintage nowadays and we\'re in the same boat old-age-wise. I have a couple of things that could probably benefit from being recapped, but I\'ve never gotten into the weeds that far yet. One of these days when I\'ve got some time in front of me, I would like to replace the capacitors in my Pioneer reel-to-reel tape deck. I feel like this would probably help with the weak left channel. No time right now, though.','2021-11-24 07:28:26'),
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(3316,3473,'2021-11-24 01:06:54','Trey','Congrats','Congrats on earning your amateur radio license. It is always interesting to learn some of the differences between operations in different countries. For example, here in the USA, it is generally frowned upon to call \"CQ\" on the 10M and 70cm bands as these are littered with repeaters. We often simply transmit our call sign.\r\n\r\nI look forward to additional amateur radio episodes, and am planning to post one about my Go Box build, assuming I ever get out of the planning phase and into the building phase.\r\n\r\n73','2021-11-24 20:59:36'),
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(3317,3485,'2021-11-24 15:52:56','monochromec','The show','Great show - this of course is an ugly mirror showing exactly how time flies and how we have been getting old ever since...','2021-11-24 20:59:36'),
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(3318,3472,'2021-11-27 11:59:41','Kevin O\'Brien','I loved the show','I think this is a perfect example of hacking. Fantastic!','2021-11-27 19:11:13'),
|
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(3319,3474,'2021-11-27 12:19:46','Ken Fallon','No please don\'t add silence to the audio','Hi All,\r\n\r\nIt is a great idea to record a piece of silence to use as a \"Noise profile\" for using with the \"Effect > Noise Reduction\" feature in Audacity. However please do this *before* you upload it to HPR. \r\n\r\nIt is opening a can of worms to ask hosts to submit this before having a process in place to deal with it. If we learned anything from is it included or not Intro Outro thing, is that everyone will do their own thing. Will the silence be at the beginning or the end ? What if it\'s in the middle ? Was the silence intentional ? Will truncate silence work ? \r\n\r\nSo great idea for a host but please, please, please do not do this.','2021-11-27 19:11:13'),
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(3320,3459,'2021-11-29 15:37:08','Oliver','TerminusDB Link','Hey,\r\nI see you have a link to one of our blogs here and I\'m just writing to let you know that we\'ve changed URLs so wondered if you could change:\r\n\r\nhttps://blog.terminusdb.com/we-love-gplv3-but-are-switching-license-to-apache-2-0-terminusdb\r\n\r\nto\r\n\r\nhttps://terminusdb.com/blog/we-love-gplv3-but-are-switching-license-to-apache-2-0-terminusdb/\r\n\r\nThanks,\r\nOliver','2021-11-30 20:59:09'),
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(3321,3478,'2021-12-01 03:27:16','Trey','I am sure the Audio/Video department loves you','Thanks for sharing this great little hack. It may have a negative impact on the impedance matching for this audio input channel, but it shouldn\'t be overtly noticeable when listening.\r\nThanks, again, for sharing.','2021-12-01 23:01:27'),
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(3322,3473,'2021-12-02 13:38:33','Trey','UGH! Correction.','I just glanced at my comment and realized I meant 2M (meter) bands instead of 10M (meter) bands.','2021-12-02 19:20:28'),
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(3323,3479,'2021-12-02 19:43:35','Trey','Thanks for sharing.','I have been managing versions of configuration files locally on my system, and you have inspired me to try to use GitHub instead.\r\n\r\nWe shall see how it goes.\r\n\r\nKeep up the awesome work.','2021-12-02 20:40:41'),
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(3324,3493,'2021-12-04 23:43:11','DNT','Great episode','Thanks for the podcast recommendation, great name for it too!','2021-12-05 21:24:43'),
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(3325,3474,'2021-12-06 22:02:50','Operat0r','replace Ken Fallon with a script','\"Cannot be automated!!!?!??!\" Ooohhhhhh Shame !!! Alexa? Siri? Neural networks?? Everything can (and will....) be automated! I would start with detection of \"notes\" similar how singing autotune can make people almost sound like they can sing. Where the audio is checked for n length of music .. id it\'s near the beginning and matches the intro music by n% then they included the intro and if the notes don\'t match maybe it\'s some other \"music\" or \"singing\" ? Same for outro. \r\n\r\nTHE ONLY LIMIT IS YOURSELF!\r\n\r\nhttps://www.zombo.com/\r\n\r\n**Struck a nerve there** <3\r\n\r\nYou make a good point about messing with people\'s audio.\r\n\r\nI imagine a fully automated system that will manage at least 75% of uploads ;)\r\n\r\nWhat if you only had to answer one question?\r\n\r\nChoose an option:\r\n\r\n1) Let HPR edit your audio:\r\n- remove noise\r\n- detect presence intro\r\n- detect presence outro\r\n- ???\r\n\r\n2) do not edit my audio','2021-12-06 22:05:45'),
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(3326,3474,'2021-12-07 12:19:28','Ken Fallon','Thanks for Volunteering','Hi Operat0r,\r\n\r\nThanks for volunteering to do this. Once we have the script up and running then we can announce it to the general population.\r\n\r\nKen','2021-12-07 20:52:53'),
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(3327,3474,'2021-12-10 00:50:25','Operat0r','fun','Yah. I caught the Spanish episode and thought I could try a rough translation to English with the script I wrote to speech to text \"any\" media.\r\n\r\nhttps://github.com/freeload101/SCRIPTS/blob/master/Bash/Stream_to_Text_with_Keywords.sh\r\n\r\nDetection of standard HPR intro should be possible and if I\'m lucky I can detect any non standard like humming etc but I only ever done basic darknet training with images.','2021-12-10 20:42:47'),
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(3328,3292,'2021-12-18 22:03:46','dodddummy','Where\'s the thumbs down button?','What are you talking about? You seem to think that if a distro removes an application they hate it can call them names. Part of making a distro is adjusting the curate application list.\r\n\r\nIt never occurred to me that HPR should have a thumbs down button until I listened to this piece of work.','2021-12-19 19:05:12'),
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(3329,3394,'2021-12-22 18:54:26','dnt','I consulted this episode this week','When I listened to \"We need to talk about XML\", I nodded in agreement. Working in localization there\'s a lot of XLIFF, so I have learned to appreciate it. This week I had a chance to use xmlstarlet at work, so I came back and had another listen to this. There was some trouble figuring out the deal with XML namespaces, I found that in xmlstarlet you can use //_:node where the underscore stands for the default namespace. For now, this just worked, but I do need to learn more about namespaces. Thanks again!','2021-12-23 10:43:25'),
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(3330,3495,'2021-12-24 14:31:31','Trey','Great recommendation','Thanks for the recommendation. I listened and it was a great dive into one of my favorite Christmas films of all time.','2021-12-24 22:42:23'),
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(3331,3493,'2021-12-25 03:18:57','Oyente#1','Gracias','Muy bueno tu podcast y hablas español, perdón, castellano muy bien! \r\nSaludos desde Puerto Rico.','2021-12-25 23:21:01'),
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(3332,3482,'2021-12-30 00:09:50','Windigo','Fascinating subject','This is a stellar first episode. Harvested electronic components, robotics on the cheap... made for the apocalypse, but fun beforehand as well!\r\n\r\nThank you for the additional video links; I\'m glad I was able to see these robots in action.\r\n\r\nI\'m looking forward to future shows in this series!','2021-12-30 13:16:53'),
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(3333,3496,'2021-12-30 13:15:13','Dave Morriss','Great show','A very interesting approach to recording HPR shows. Not a method that ever occurred to me - but that\'s what HPR is all about :-)\r\n\r\nGreat to hear your comments about MrGadgets. He was an HPR stalwart for many years, and I for one miss his contributions. I was listening to some of his shows while working on the tag project and it was great to hear him.','2021-12-30 13:16:53'),
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(3334,3504,'2022-01-06 21:50:00','dnt','Mission control','Great broadcast! \"That\'s the main engine I think, and that\'s the booster. Wow! And there it goes, goodness me!\" is one of those audio clips that we will hear for generations to come. And I suspect many of the same phrases were heard at mission control that day, such as \"I don\'t fully understand how [Lagrange point] works\" and \"You want to do that otherwise you end up with a rather wishy-washy bit of turkey, don\'t you?\"','2022-01-06 21:55:43'),
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(3335,3485,'2022-01-07 12:44:28','wynaut','thanks great show','agree with prev comment, listener who just turned 51 :)','2022-01-07 20:22:37'),
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(3336,3496,'2022-01-09 16:24:54','Reto','a good idea','Hi,\r\nThank you for this program and the introduction as a podcast.\r\n\r\nI just downloaded the .zip from GitLab and while trying the commands, I realize a section with dependencies is missing. I think pip is too large, so, I usually do run it in an virtualenv.\r\nIn other Phython projects like here: https://github.com/jonaswinkler/paperless-ng/blob/master/requirements.txt you find a requirements.txt. I was wondering if you add one too?\r\n\r\nBr,\r\nReto','2022-01-09 20:19:26'),
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(3337,3498,'2022-01-09 19:37:21','operat0r','Love this show','reminds me a little bit of udev random podcast. this one had a lot of laughs! You guys are my friends for now. Mine won\'t do anything.. Holidays are hard for some/most people. Shooting the shit and ranting are my fav podcast eps!\r\n\r\nTake care of yourselves! your the only U you have!','2022-01-09 20:19:26'),
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(3338,3505,'2022-01-11 04:02:01','baffled','Nice show!','Hi Ken and Beni: It was a great show thank you. Things have sure changed since I got my ticket. I\'m looking forward to future episodes in this series.','2022-01-11 20:31:52'),
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(3339,3510,'2022-01-17 07:59:16','tuturto','This brought some memories','This was fun to listen to and remember how my first PC was hand me down IBM 088 that I got from a local metal shop. It had whopping 640kb of memory and two floppy drives (no hard drive at all). There were no fancy graphical user interface or anything, all interaction was on text mode with keyboard.','2022-01-17 21:00:02'),
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(3340,3322,'2022-01-21 21:13:55','Windigo','Lost udev episode','I was surprised to hear you say you\'ve never done an episode on udev, because I distinctly remember that episode! You were discussing creating your own udev rules to automatically run tasks upon inserting a USB drive.\r\n\r\nIt may be that you\'ve never done an episode on HPR about it; I can\'t find it for the life of me.\r\n\r\nEither way, thank you - as always - for the excellent episode. :)','2022-01-21 21:21:50'),
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(3341,3517,'2022-01-25 23:05:07','Jesse','Monty Mint phone','Did your Monty Mint phone ever come in? I remember you mentioned it on a previous episode. Would love to hear your experience with the phone.','2022-01-25 23:17:33'),
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(3342,3516,'2022-01-26 02:48:49','Janedoc','empathize with you','Dear Operator, I prescribe the medicines you discuss. It is a big ol\' pain for doctors too. The law changed in 2021 that you\'re not supposed to fill controlled substances with a paper prescription, only electronic. I see my ADHD patients every 3 months. The patients call my office every 30 days in between for a refill and the refill is done electronically from my desk. My patients don\'t have the problems you do. There should be a 5 day leeway (before your rx runs out). I use Good rx for my own family\'s prescriptions. It makes a big cost difference and I do not know how Good rx work either. In order for the controlled substances act to change it will take an act of congress, so contact your congress member.','2022-01-26 22:48:41'),
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(3343,3504,'2022-02-03 12:08:51','clacke','How L2 works','I attempted an explanation of how L2 orbit works over at https://libranet.de/display/0b6b25a8-1861-f16a-5504-65e089452108 but I\'ll repeat it in brief.\r\n\r\nYou can orbit L2 because Earth pulls you. The Y component of the pull keeps you in orbit around L2 and the X component cancels out with your centrifugal force from orbiting the Sun \"too fast\".\r\n\r\nThere is also a proper and deeper explanation:\r\n\r\nLaunch Pad Astronomy: How James Webb Orbits \'Nothing\'\r\n\r\nhttps://farside.link/invidious/watch?v=ybn8-_QV8Tg\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybn8-_QV8Tg','2022-02-04 11:44:31'),
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(3344,3504,'2022-02-03 12:14:37','clacke','Re: centrifugal force','As for whether the centrifugal force is real or not I will forever refer to https://xkcd.com/123/ .\r\n\r\nForces aren\'t real anyway!','2022-02-04 11:44:31'),
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(3345,3525,'2022-02-04 22:39:28','Xoke','Multiple words in a row','I was talking about the horse and cart sign, and the guy that made it left too much space between \'horse\' and \'and\', and \'and\' and cart...\r\n\r\nAnd the completely contrived one about \'had\', where someone doing a test used \'had\', someone else used \'had had\', however the examiner preferred \'had had\'.\r\n\r\nSmith, where Jones had had \"had,\" had had \"had had\"; \"had had\" had had the examiners approval','2022-02-04 22:44:08'),
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(3346,3286,'2022-02-05 11:10:41','Ken Fallon','Thanks again','Just used that again','2022-02-05 20:07:33'),
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(3347,3289,'2022-02-05 11:12:43','Ken Fallon','Wasting shows','Each of these could have been its own show','2022-02-05 20:07:33'),
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(3348,2881,'2022-02-08 15:46:26','Ken Fallon','I knew I heard how to do this somewhere','A bit surprised to find it was myself that did the show. Is HPR my archive memory module ?','2022-02-08 18:33:57'),
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(3349,3525,'2022-02-08 18:32:12','Dave Morriss','Where Jones had had \"had\" ...','Hi Xoke,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment.\r\n\r\nThe \'had had\' things were a favourite of my late father, so they were instilled into my brain from an early age. It was great to be reminded of them, thanks :-)\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-08 18:33:57'),
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(3350,3538,'2022-02-08 19:44:27','Ken Fallon','How to run it','flatpak run org.tenacityaudio.Tenacity','2022-02-08 19:48:21'),
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(3351,3525,'2022-02-10 03:23:59','dnt','processes','Now I think we\'re seeing some people take the plurals like crises into any plural word that ends in -es, so we\'re hearing people say \"processees\". Start talking about processees and I stop listening.','2022-02-10 19:28:07'),
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(3352,3525,'2022-02-10 22:21:57','wynaut','thanks!','I learnt something new here, will listen to the other episodes in this series too.','2022-02-10 23:37:11'),
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(3353,3525,'2022-02-11 10:22:12','Dave Morriss','Re: processes','Hi dnt,\r\n\r\nI am also reluctant to listen to people floundering about with these apparently random singulars and plurals. After all there are some amazingly good resources on the internet that explain unusual words and where they came from.\r\n\r\nHowever, I suppose you need some sort of incentive to look.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:19'),
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(3354,3525,'2022-02-11 10:26:08','Dave Morriss','Hope you find the episodes useful, wynaut','Hi,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment. I hope you find the whole set of episodes useful.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:20'),
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(3355,3315,'2022-02-13 14:56:47','Ken Fallon','Yet another one','Load memory ....','2022-02-13 20:51:47'),
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(3356,3286,'2022-02-13 17:25:47','timttmy','Me too!','Glad at least two of us find it useful.\r\nJust setting up a new (to me) gen 2 thinkpad x1 yoga and needed to remind myself how to create client keys :)','2022-02-13 20:51:47'),
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(3491,3644,'2022-07-16 10:23:47','Archer72','Pinball machines and English','That was interesting. I remember working at a place that assembled the lighting backplanes for these machines. I would get to play on the machines at lunch. Two of the memorable ones were Star Wars, The Adams Family and Last Action Hero.\r\n\r\nOh, and your English is just fine, and you might find Dave Morris\' series on English idiosyncrasies a good listen, starting with \r\nhpr2558 :: Battling with English - part 1','2022-07-16 18:35:37'),
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(3357,3527,'2022-02-15 18:41:04','Windigo','PATA and Netbooks','My Dell Mini 9 has the same PATA interface, so it seems like it was all the rage during the netbook days.\r\n\r\nBetween that and 32-bit Atom processors, I\'m afraid mine is reaching the limit of its usefulness. Mine\'s relegated to console and framebuffer apps. Kudos on getting yours running Chromium!','2022-02-15 19:34:23'),
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(3358,3533,'2022-02-16 07:55:18','tuturto','interesting','Porridge is one of those things that many people probably find very mundane. But when you start digging into details, you\'ll discover a lot of interesting tidbits. Like what kind of grains are for animals and what are for humans varies from culture to culture and from time period to other.','2022-02-16 20:01:18'),
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(3359,3533,'2022-02-16 15:10:20','Trey','Steel Cut Oats','Thank you for sharing. I absolutely LOVE steel cut oats. Much better than rolled, IMHO.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to your next podcast topic.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
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(3360,3531,'2022-02-16 15:14:26','Trey','Old school KVMs','Thank you for sharing. I remember taking apart old, mechanical KVM switches to clean the contacts for more reliable operation. \r\nI still have several electronic KVMs floating around, but haven\'s had the need in quite some time. I definitely need to look into using Barrier.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
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(3361,3526,'2022-02-16 15:19:05','Trey','Comments','It was sad that there were no comments on the December Community News episode, so I had to leave a comment for this one.\r\n\r\nYou all do an amazing job ensuring that every podcast for the month receives discussion. As a (infrequent) HPR contributor, I enjoy comments on my podcasts and hearing your thoughts. Surely others feel the same.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work!','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
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(3362,3533,'2022-02-16 15:32:48','Dave Morriss','Great show topic, excellent show','Hi,\r\n\r\nI was listening to this while making porridge for my breakfast. I have some steel cut oats - I live in Scotland after all - but I tend to prefer rolled oats, probably because it\'s what I was brought up on (in England mind you). In Scotland steel cut oats are called pin head oatmeal.\r\n\r\nMy porridge gets salt and a teaspoon of honey. I\'m diabetic so I avoid sugar, but only recently found that honey has a low glycaemic index (about 50 probably) so is not going to give me a sugar high like sugar would - at least not a teaspoon of it!\r\n\r\nI used to visit the Far East each year many years ago, and I became quite keen on rice porridge - congee. It\'s very bland but is eaten with lots of added stuff like pickles and roasted peanuts, and was pretty good for breakfast.\r\n\r\nGreat show. I enjoyed the ambient sound aspects a lot.\r\n','2022-02-16 12:09:46'),
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(3363,3472,'2022-02-17 21:23:34','Stache_AF','Thank you','Your podcast gave me the idea to do the same for my state\'s daily COVID updates. I was able to find the API info and break it out so I could extract my state\'s, county\'s, and zip code\'s respective numbers so I don\'t have to click through several interactive maps.','2022-02-17 21:25:30'),
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(3364,3534,'2022-02-18 18:34:53','Aaronb','At 66 Years old. . . .','I bought one about 4 years ago. I\'m surprised how much I use it. Here is a nice youtube video that show how even cheap ebay versions of electronic ones are great.','2022-02-18 20:33:57'),
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(3365,3534,'2022-02-18 18:36:35','Aaronb','sorry forgot the Link','https://youtu.be/fKSSY1gzCEs','2022-02-18 20:33:57'),
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(3366,3527,'2022-02-21 01:27:29','ClaudioM','Re; PATA and Netbooks','I hear ya on extending the lives of these devices nowadays, but with OpenBSD and Fluxbox, along with the SSD and adapter, it\'s surprisingly useful! Firefox won\'t build on OpenBSD/x86 (it segfaults since it needs more memory) so they won\'t be including it any longer. SeaMonkey is still available, but not sure for how much longer.','2022-02-21 20:16:29'),
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(3367,3523,'2022-02-21 16:20:16','LinuxMintXFCE','Compose','Thank you very much. I\'ve been working on learning languages with DuoLingo but the special characters I\'ve ignored because I could not enter them easily. My notes with vim were correct because I could easily map keys. But I had no idea how to do it with linux in general without entering a bunch of keys that sometimes conflicted with the app.\r\n\r\nSo all I had to do was:\r\n1. Settings\r\n1.1. Keyboard\r\n1.1.1. Select Layout tab\r\n1.1.1.1. Slide off \"Use system defaults\"\r\n1.1.1.2. Under \"Compose key\" select \"right alt\"\r\n1.1.1.3. close everything under settings\r\n2. vi ~/.XCompose (A file I did not have.)\r\n2.1. Modify it as shown and save \r\nhttps://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xorg/Keyboard_configuration#Configuring_compose_key\r\n3. Reboot the system and done!\r\n\r\nA todo might be to add special keys to do repetitive tasks...','2022-02-21 20:16:29'),
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(3368,3228,'2022-02-21 16:28:53','Windigo','Exactly what I needed','This episode was the explanation of YAML that I needed.\r\n\r\nI know it\'s been years since it aired, but I use the fundamentals explained here every single time I open a YAML file.','2022-02-21 20:16:29'),
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(3369,3536,'2022-02-22 19:30:38','Zen_floater2','I have the Google GO pro chromebook, had the same problems','I assume it was a Russian attack at first. It all happened after one of Google\'s updates. I then just unplugged the chrome book and powered it off. Then I started the chrome book up again and plugged it into a power source and the entire thing was resolved. \r\nI also notice that Slackware 15 had locked up twice on me after my 1st boot on a different laptop and the same kind of thing had to be done over there too.','2022-02-22 20:44:15'),
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(3370,3538,'2022-02-27 18:55:01','Random_Linux_User','Re hpr3538 :: Installing the Tenacity audio editor','tenacity is an almost dead project. If you take a look at their repository closely, you\'ll see that all that is happening is rebranding. Very little has happened there in the past few months. Audacity has been a work of two guys (Paul Licameli & James Crook) and without them I don\'t see anyone is capable of adding new features and improvements to it. After all it has been their brainchild, their labor of love.\r\nTelemetry is everywhere. From KDE to Firefox. Unless and until it\'s stealthy and doesn\'t give you options to opt-out, it\'s not that bad.','2022-02-27 19:51:19'),
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(3371,3541,'2022-02-28 14:07:36','publius','\"Have\" constructions','For most speakers of Western European languages, whether more (eg German) or less (eg English) inflected, Latin serves as the paradigm for inflected languages. Of course it\'s not anything like as commonly taught in schools anymore, but it\'s still there in the background, serving as the model against which the grammar of the vernacular has traditionally been constructed. For the Sclavonic languages, such as Russian, the paradigm is Classical Greek.\r\n\r\nIn Latin, there is of course a verb \"habere\" meaning \"to have\" (as well as \"tenere\", \"to hold\"), but it is common to use the copula or being-verb with the dative. In other words, \"I have it\" or \"it belongs to me\" is often expressed with \"id mihi est\", quasi-literally translated into English as \"it to-me is\".\r\n\r\nInterestingly, I have read that, in many languages, whatever \"have\" constructions exist tend to be taken over by the verb meaning \"hold\" or \"grasp\". An obvious example is the way that, in Spanish for example, the verb derived from \"tenere\" is used to mean \"hold\", while the Latin \"habere\" has essentially vanished. English cognates such as \"tenure\", \"tenancy\", and so on also show a movement from the concrete to the abstract.','2022-02-28 21:22:59'),
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(3372,3515,'2022-03-03 18:11:04','Archer72','On my list','Hi Ken, this subject is on my list to try.','2022-03-04 20:54:57'),
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(3373,1743,'2022-03-05 15:50:52','Ken Fallon','Thank you Lord D','Although he has passed, his wisdom continues to guide us.','2022-03-05 19:29:20'),
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(3374,3496,'2022-03-09 19:25:17','dnt','I use it','Thanks for this! I used this for my latest episode. Still had to go to Audacity and edit it, largely to remove a ton of ums. I also then created a new script.txt in another folder, just to record a couple of bits to insert, so that it would sound the same as the rest of it. Will try to get better at writing the script and avoiding the ums so that it can go straight to HPR. Great stuff!\r\n\r\nFor listeners of the community news, since this show, norrist has put this in PyPI, so even easier to get it. Try it out!','2022-03-09 19:42:53'),
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(3375,3546,'2022-03-09 19:46:26','dnt','Thank you','Thank you for generously doing these shows. It makes a difference to contributors, to the extent that it confirms to us that we exist. I look forward to listening.\r\n\r\nAlso, it is important to hear feedback. For example, after listening to this, I have cancelled plans to do to that Wikipedia article with all the porridge, linked under that monstrosity of a show about porridge, what Klaatu has done in his own podcast to another list of interest to hackers. Alas, it was going to cover a lot of slots. On to something else, then.','2022-03-09 20:18:42'),
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(3376,3534,'2022-03-10 14:36:35','Michael','Unit missmatch','Hi Ken,\r\n\r\nnice show!\r\nI assume your pencil is 7.5mm in diameter, not cm. Just stating the obvious, because noone else did till now :-)\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2022-03-10 22:43:38'),
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(3377,3461,'2022-03-12 12:28:25','Bentley Sorsdahl','The TTS voice','I like very much the outro voice you are using, can you tell me what you use to generate it ? I found HPR just a short time ago and have been enjoying very much listening to all the shows. Have even started thinking about answering the call and recording an intro myself .. not sure 100% yet.\r\n\r\nkeep up all the great work thanks for your time \r\n\r\n Bentley','2022-03-14 21:39:53'),
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(3378,3553,'2022-03-16 15:52:05','Trey','Great Intro','Love the automated voice intro for this one. Much easier to understand when listening at 1.5x speed.','2022-03-17 11:29:25'),
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(3379,3553,'2022-03-16 15:58:11','Trey','Important topic','SGoTT, this is a very important topic. It is challenging to balance freedom of expression among a diverse group of users with different social and moral frameworks. We often forget that, in the United States, government supports freedom of public speech (also within certain guidelines), but organizations may impose their own restrictions on the platforms they own/administer. Their choices are then influenced by their customers\' choices to continue to do business with them or leave.\r\n\r\nThank you for sharing, and I look forward to your next amazing podcast!','2022-03-17 11:29:26'),
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(3380,3553,'2022-03-17 11:02:21','Beeza','Free Speech','Hi \"Some Guy\"\r\n\r\nA great episode, raising excellent points, but I feel the crux of the issues you raise is courtesy and dignity rather than free speech per se.\r\n\r\nFree speech generally refers to the ideas you are expressing. How you express them is where courtesy comes in. There is a world of difference between \"If you look at the online manuals you should find the information that will solve your problem\" and \"RTFM!\"\r\n\r\nYou\'ll probably be aware of the controversy about Richard Stallman\'s ejection from the FSF and subsequent readmission. This was a result of his expressing what most people felt were distasteful ideas. Very little of what followed was criticism of RMS\' views based on rational, level-headed argument. It was all about personal insult and trying to shut RMS down, saying he shouldn\'t have expressed his views. There was no respect of his right of free speech. Much as I similarly rejected most of what RMS had said, the episode demonstrated to me that even in the world of \"free culture\" that we claim to support the adherence to the right of true free speech is as tenuous and conditional as it is in wider society.\r\n\r\nI have asked many questions on free software forums over the years and generally found nothing but help and courtesy. However, every now and then I\'ve come across respondents whose primary aim is to show how clever they are and to belittle my relative lack of knowledge. They are the people who give FLOSS a bad image. On the plus side, though, in the same way as you, me and everyone else come to realise that these jerks don\'t represent the majority I think most newbies will as well, provided they don\'t encounter one on their first ever request for help.','2022-03-17 19:18:44'),
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(3381,3553,'2022-03-17 20:41:04','Ken Fallon','My thoughts','Hi SGoTI,\r\n\r\nThanks for the thought provoking show. A few observations if I may.\r\n\r\nThe show focused on the concept of freedom of speech from a US centric perspective. It\'s important to remember that other (democratic) countries have their own laws\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_by_country\r\n\r\nHaving time to consider your points, I feel it\'s fair to say that the Linux Foundation should be running Linux on their computers. Would Steve Jobs be seen in front of a Windows computer, or Bill Gates a Mac ? It\'s\' just bad business to not run your own products.\r\n\r\nFurthermore the \"Shur Mac is Unix\" ideology is dangerous and can be shown to be damaging to the community by focusing people on convenience over moral values. Case in point. Despite the fact that so many \"Linux\" developers run Mac Books, it is still one of the most under supported platforms out there. I tried to get Linux to run on a MacBook with the same specs and release date as my Dell. While there were many issues with the Dell that have been fixed over the years, it\'s still not possible to get a MacBook to run Linux. This is a direct quote from a developer I asked for help. \"I actually gave up on Fedora on my macbook, too many things are broken (wifi, audio, webcam).\"\r\n\r\nI also do not agree that we should welcome developers of closed or even open core applications. This is akin to McDonalds expecting a warm welcome in a vegan club because they put lettuces on a Big Mac.\r\n\r\nDevelopers and the community have a right to a belief in Free Libre and Open Source software, the Commons and related views. It is valid that they should not be welcoming with open arms developments that run against that belief. Provided of course that it is done with courtesy.','2022-03-17 20:55:25'),
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(3382,3533,'2022-03-18 05:08:44','Windigo','Very informative','This episode has revealed that, although I had heard the term \"porridge\" before, I never realized how many of my favorite foods it encompassed. Excellent!\r\n\r\nAlso, thank you for the feedback on the \"Opposing views\" episode, it is much appreciated.','2022-03-18 19:16:54'),
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(3383,3551,'2022-03-20 20:26:20','Some Guy On The Internet','Bash for the Win.','Hello Dave, How are you? I love the show; bash can be very simple or crazy complex depending on your needs. I haven’t used `eval` yet but now I have a reason to use it. Piping text from a file into a script to create commands sounds fun (and scary), so I’ll be experimenting on a Raspberry Pi; so I don’t end the night crying while restoring from a backup, again. Thanks for the show!','2022-03-20 20:44:39'),
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(3384,3551,'2022-03-21 17:14:44','Dave Morriss','Hi SGOTI','I appreciate the feedback. Yes, Bash has a lot of power and can be used for many things. \r\n\r\nYou are right, a Raspberry Pi is a great test bed; I use them often.\r\n\r\nI hope you found the show useful. Let us know if you find better ways of doing these types of things.\r\n\r\nBest wishes, Dave','2022-03-21 19:02:37'),
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(3385,3553,'2022-03-22 19:16:33','jezra','the show','The Linux Foundation is a 501c6 non-profit trade association. Their purpose is to help their members use Linux to increase profits. The promotion of desktop Linux, is not a priority of the Foundation.\r\n\r\nThe steam deck will use Arch Linux because it is cheaper to use linux than it is to pay licensing fees for a proprietary OS. Using a high quality rolling release Linux is also cheaper than writing one\'s own OS. In this regard, Valve is standing on the shoulders of the devs who have put decades of work into making Arch what it is today. The Arch community owes absolutely nothing to Valve; and without Linux, Valve wouldn\'t have a product to sell.','2022-03-22 19:23:46'),
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(3386,3558,'2022-03-23 22:06:45','Some Guy On The Internet','Nicely done.','Thank you for the show. I’ve never used Haskell but I have a book from “Learn you a haskell” (great site, love the sun image). So often podcast will recommend something but will not link to any resources. You’ve given us so much additional content we can use to learn more about this language. Thank you, and please do more shows on haskell (example. compiling code or testing/debugging your code).','2022-03-23 22:08:32'),
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(3387,3558,'2022-03-24 08:12:52','tuturto','Good idea','Thanks for the idea Some Guy On The Internet. I do have an episode about testing in Haskell (http://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2948). My debugging skills are non-existent, it\'s basically either staring at the code with a stern expression or sprinkling lots of prints all around the places I suspect might be faulty. Really should learn some basic debugging skills I think.','2022-03-24 23:04:08'),
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(3388,3552,'2022-03-26 23:01:52','Some Guy On The Internet','Development on Pinetime','Are you developing apps for the Pine Time? Are you planning any development of apps or system resources for the Pine Time? I like hearing about these devices but I don’t know where to start if I purchased one; and what’s the end game? Is it supposed to be for development only or can I one day replace my apple watch? Good show, I’d love to hear more about your work with the pine time.','2022-03-27 18:06:03'),
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(3389,1780,'2022-03-27 18:06:30','elmussol','mistag','Tag should be GnuPG not GnuPGP.','2022-03-27 18:09:33'),
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